environmental policy

UK Housing Fuelling Climate Change

Publication date:  26 April, 2005

Summary

Britain's homes are responsible for 28% of our CO2 emissions. The average UK home emits more than a car a year. The government is embarking on a massive new house building programme over the coming years which presents a prime opportunity to reverse this trend. If the government is serious about tackling climate change, it needs to adopt tough new standards to make sure the nation's new homes are part of the solution, not adding to the problem.

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Blair and Climate Change - the Rhetoric-Reality Gap

Publication date:  26 April, 2005

Summary

UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has publicly stated that tackling climate change and African poverty are to be his two top priorities during the UK's presidencies of the G8 and the EU. Blair has repeatedly spoken of his climate change commitments while failing to reduce the UK's climate changing CO2 emissions since coming to power in 1997. In the run up to the G8 in July, Blair needs to match his rhetoric with action.

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Environmental Principles of Radioactive Waste Management

Publication date:  20 May, 2004

Summary

The UK nuclear industry, its regulators, government agencies and policy advisory bodies have in recent years attempted to change policies and activities related to nuclear waste management. Many of these have failed in gaining public support. This lack of confidence is, Greenpeace believes, due primarily to the fact that the policies and their implementation are not based on clear environmental principles.

This Greenpeace briefing highlights the major failures in current policy, and addresses possible solutions.

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QC Paul Lasok's advice on Energy Bill

Publication date:  10 May, 2004

Summary

Top state aid and competition experts, Paul Lasok QC and Rebecca Haynes, advised Greenpeace that the Government cannot pass its planned Energy Bill without EC approval because it may breach European rules on state aid.

Download the full advice.

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How to make REACH work - an MEP's guide

Publication date:  21 March, 2007

Publication date: March 2004

Summary
REACH (Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation of Chemicals) will completely change the way chemicals are controlled. It will pass through the European Parliament during 2004 and 2005, and should become law in 2006. When it comes into force, chemical companies will, for the first time, have to provide basic health and environmental safety data on the chemicals they produce.

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A brief history of science and society

Oil seed rape

Oilseed rape

Science: Our critique

Greenpeace Research Labs: Dr R Stringer

Greenpeace Research Labs: Dr R Stringer

Corporate criminal Dow Chemical exposed in South Africa

Greenpeace exposes Dow Chemicals in South Africa

Greenpeace exposes Dow Chemicals in South Africa

Greenpeace today put the spotlight on one of the world

Joan Walley, Labour MP, Stoke-on-Trent North

Joan Walley Green MP

Joan Walley Green MP