Also by tracy

Greenpeace is fed up over coal down under

Posted by tracy - 9 April 2008 at 12:28pm - Comments

Greenpeace flies hot-air ballon over one of Australia's biggest sources of C02 emissions

The UK government is not the only one trying to kick start a new coal era. In South Australia the premier is on the verge of approving two new coal projects.

Greenpeace volunteers take on climate change with spades and shovels

Posted by tracy - 9 April 2008 at 11:55am - Comments

Volunteers in new zealand plant trees to reforest cleared area

Our office in New Zealand has turned their hands to extreme gardening. The island nation is well known for its burgeoning agricultural industry and now the government is converting 25,000 hectares of forest into large-scale intensive dairy farms.

They are currently clearing in Tahorakuri forest on the central north island and the Ministry for Agriculture and Forestry estimates that 445,000 hectares of forest are at risk of being destroyed and converted primarily for dairy farms. So our office there got their spades out.

Cost of nuclear waste could kill off plans for a new fleet

Posted by tracy - 27 March 2008 at 12:01pm - Comments

The government says the decision on building new nuclear reactors will be entirely up to the market and utility companies will have to pay their "full share" of decommissioning and waste management costs, but Gordon Brown is going to have to cook the books like a cordon bleu chef he if wants to attract new investment.

While Brown teams up with French president Nicholas Sarkozy at Emirates stadium today to push through his dream of a new nuclear era, a government advisor is publishing a new cost analysis that suggests energy companies cannot be charged a fully commercial price for waste disposal without "killing the prospect" of a new generation of nuclear reactors.

Time to register for Glastonbury

Posted by tracy - 26 February 2008 at 4:22pm - Comments

I've been getting emails for months now about the summer festival options, there were even promises of sunshine (I don’t believe them), and with spring just around the corner it's about time I started to figure out what I'll be doing.

After slogging through the mud for about a week at Glastonbury last year with the Greenpeace team, the thought of going back made my heart sink. But then I thought what if it really is sunny this year? Oh what joy I remember in those fleeting sunny moments. Ok, I can't resist it, I want to go.

Green Living: leave it off

Posted by tracy - 26 February 2008 at 2:46pm - Comments

Tomorrow night is the start of E-day. This isn't a drug fuelled dance party in east London, but a chance to show what we do together, no matter how small, can make a big difference.

E-day, or Energy Saving Day, is an experimental action by an independent organisation that aims to tackle climate change in a "fun, positive, evidence-based and inclusive" manner. It is made up of many familiar groups, businesses and individuals including Christain Aid, City of London, National Trust, National Grid, Tesco, us and, oddly, power companies.

Greenpeace campaigners climb on top Heathrow short-haul flight

Posted by tracy - 25 February 2008 at 11:25am - Comments

Greenpeace campaigners climb to the top of a BA flight at Heathrow

Photo taken on mobile phone by one of the climbers on top of the plane.

Four Greenpeace climate campaigners have just climbed on top of a Manchester to London plane after it parked at Heathrow Airport’s Terminal One. They are now covering the tailfin with a huge protest banner that reads “CLIMATE EMERGENCY – NO 3rd RUNWAY”.

Green living weekly: clean, renewable human power!

Posted by tracy - 18 February 2008 at 1:32pm - Comments

Not willing to be outdone by Bex and Jamie with their new weekly columns, I've decided to start my own. Every Monday (hopefully I haven't already set myself a standard I can't keep up) I will bring some interesting, some useful, some purely insane ideas and tips for a greener lifestyle.

Nothing says I love you like loving the planet

Posted by tracy - 13 February 2008 at 1:45pm - Comments

A Greenpeace climate-friendly Valentines Guide (mostly)

My friend Hugo recently noted "it's Valentine's Day, and the very idea of the depressingly rampant commercialism around it all makes me want to gouge my eyes out with a rusty spoon...". And he used to work in advertising. So this got me thinking about all the red and/or fluffy tat currently littering the high street. Not that I have ever been showered with such absurd gifts - no man would dare. But someone out there must be buying this stuff, and it needn't be that way.

If you are staring down the next 24 hours without a clue what to do for your lover on Valentine's day, I'm offering up some guidance that is loving towards the planet, and will put a spark in your day - the rest of the year is up to you.

BP is 'back to petroleum'

Posted by tracy - 5 February 2008 at 4:14pm - Comments

tar sands in northern Alberta
Tar sands in northern Alberta

A few years ago, BP spent about US$200 million to rebrand the company as beyond petroleum - to convince us that the company was going green, investing in renewable energy, and cared about climate change.

Statements by former Group CEO Lord John Browne called for research into the effects of his industry on climate change, and effectively got the company blackballed by the American Petroleum Institute.

Apple is getting greener, you can almost taste it

Posted by tracy - 16 January 2008 at 6:25pm - Comments

This time last year Steve Jobs was ignoring our calls for a greener Apple, but yesterday he revealed the new MacBook Air – the thinnest notebook on the planet and Apple’s greenest computer so far.

It uses less brominated fire retardants (BFRs) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), but it hasn’t eliminated them entirely. Had it done so, it would have made Apple an ecological leader.

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