Blogposts tagged 'Photography'

Greenpeace photographer Daniel Beltra wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year award

Posted by jamess - 20 October 2011 at 11:28am - 2 Comments
Daniel Beltra wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year for this photo
All rights reserved. Credit: Daniel Beltra / Greenpeace
Daniel Beltra wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year for this photo

Today, I have the honour of congratulating Greenpeace photographer Daniel Beltra on becoming the Veolia Environment Wildlife Photographer of the Year. Daniel made his winning picture for Greenpeace, of oil-oaked brown pelicans at a temporary bird-rescue facility in Fort Jackson, Louisiana, while documenting the environmental impacts caused by the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

African Voices slideshow: local fishing communities under threat

Posted by Gemma Freeman - 12 May 2011 at 4:00pm
Fishingboats arriving to Tarrafal, Santiago, Cape Verde.
All rights reserved. Credit: © Christian Åslund / Greenpeace
Fishingboats arriving to Tarrafal, Santiago, Cape Verde.

On Sunday the latest leg of African Voices begins, as three delegates from West African fishing communities arrive in London to start a tour of the UK, speaking out on how the invasion of industrial-sized EU fleets are threatening their livelihoods, food security and marine ecosystems.

Tarnished Earth: the devastating power of tar sands

Posted by jamie - 15 September 2010 at 3:42pm - 0 Comments

If you're on London's South Bank over the next few weeks, watch out for a new open air exhibition featuring the work of regular Greenpeace photographer Jiri Rezac. He's been to the tar sands works in Canada and the images he's brought back clearly show the extent of the devastation caused by this insane venture to both the environment and local populations.

The slideshow above is just a taste of Jiri's work featured in the exhibition which you can see near City Hall by Tower Bridge until 14 October. It will then be touring around the UK - details are still to be confirmed but check the Tarnished Earth website for updates. 

Sinking Sundarbans on display in London

Posted by jamie - 14 January 2010 at 5:38pm - 8 Comments

Small islands bereft of mountains are going to sink beneath the waves as sea levels rise and for the millions of people living on them, climate change is not some distant, abstract concept but a concrete reality. As noted last week, the Sundarbans islands of India and Bangladesh have lost four islands completely. Sorry, 'lost' implies that they were carelessly misplaced behind a cupboard. 'Forcibly taken' would perhaps be more apt.

Copenhagen photo exhibition illustrates extent of climate change

Posted by jamie - 10 December 2009 at 4:23pm - 2 Comments

Slightly removed from the organised chaos of the Bella Centre, the Climate Rescue Station is proving to be an oasis of calm and tranquility, a place of relaxation and reflection. Perfect, then, to host a new photographic exhibition to illustrate the impacts of climate change around the world.

October 2009 - the month in pictures

Posted by jossc - 3 November 2009 at 4:13pm - 0 Comments

A round-up of October's images from around the Greenpeace world.

 

Month in pictures - August 2009

Posted by jossc - 7 September 2009 at 1:14pm - 0 Comments

A round-up of August's images from around the Greenpeace world.

July 2009 - the month in pictures

Posted by jossc - 4 August 2009 at 1:07pm - 0 Comments

This month's round-up of images from around the Greenpeace world.

June 2009 - the month in pictures

Posted by jossc - 23 July 2009 at 3:13pm - 0 Comments

A round-up of June's most compelling images from Greenpeace actions around the world.

Glaciers and ice bridges: images from the Greenland ice sheet

Posted by jamie - 15 July 2009 at 1:37pm - 2 Comments

The Arctic Sunrise is still in Greenland where the crew (including leading climate scientists and other ice experts) have been monitoring the ongoing disintegration of the Petermann glacier.

Photographer Nick Cobbing is on board, and we've all been oohing and aahing over his stunning images as they come in to the office. They're all the more poignant as the portion of the glacier they depict may soon cease to exist. 

You can view a larger version of this slideshow, and follow updates from the Arctic Sunrise on the Climate Rescue blog.

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