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ID:505
Title:Greenpeace Blog
URL:http://weblog.greenpeace.org/
Category:Environment: Macro Activists
Description:Environmental issues are spotlighted and analysed here.
New allies in the oceans revolution - Tue, 22 May 2012 13:42:00 +0200

Over the past few years we’ve seenincreased consumer demandfor sustainable tuna products. At the moment, the best option on the shelves ispole and line caught skipjack tuna, the population of which is still relatively plentiful. Pole and line is a simple technique that catches tuna one by one. If we want ample tuna supplies tomorrow, we need global investment and support for sustainable fishing methods such as pole and line today.

There is now a new ally in reforming tuna fisheries for the benefit of the oceans and the millions of people dependent on them for food and jobs.The International Pole and Line Foundationrecently launched, advocating for the welfare of socially and economically disadvantaged fishing communities around the world. By bringing together coastal states, market players, fisheries development experts and scientists, IPNLF will be able to hasten the transition of the fishing sector to truly sustainable and equitable fishing. This launch is proof of the momentum our movement has in creating a future of healthy oceans.

Generally,pole and line fishingallows coastal communities to participate in not just catching tuna, but also in profiting from it. Most of the world’s tuna fisheries take place in the waters of some of the most vulnerable and poorest communities in the world. By choosing pole and line fishing over more destructive fishing such as mainstream tuna methods of purse seine fishing on FADs, the tuna industry can ensure jobs and food for the future, avoid bycatch of sharks, dolphins and turtles.

In order for pole and line fishing to succeed on a global scale, it needs sustainably caught fish used as bait. We are working with IPNLFto ensure that baitfish fisheries are managed betterso that when you buy a can of tuna, you can be sure it is completely responsible. 

These aren’t just issues of tuna, the tuna industry employs millions of people who need long-term jobs. Without fish, billions of people will have no future. It is likely that the price of pole and line caught tuna will be more than tuna caught using destructive methods. But we believe that it is time to pay a price to avoid hunger, empty oceans and increased unemployment. You can help by asking your government to end all subsidies of wasteful fisheries and support pole and line fishing in your country. Leaders should be supporting ocean conservation measures such as those championed by Pacific island nations who are leading the way in another arena of sustainable tuna fishing FAD free purse seine fishing and keep the fishing profits in the hands of those who need them most: fishing communities, not huge industrial fishing companies.

Sari Tolvanen is a Greenpeace International oceans campaigner based in Amsterdam.


Out in the cold: why Shell's Arctic plans are a risky investment - Tue, 22 May 2012 13:30:00 +0200

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The past few weeks has been dubbed by many as the'shareholder spring'. Chief executives of some of the world’s biggest companies – Aviva, Cairn Energy, RBS, and HSBC among others – have suffered as shareholders have expressed their very strong disapproval of high pay for executives, as performance has stagnated or even crashed. Thenew reportthat we, along withFairPensionsandPlatform, have released today shows just how much more shareholders and executives will have to worry about soon. 

As the international oil companies like Shell run out of easily accessible oil, they’re being pushed to the environmentally destructive, high-cost oil provinces like the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the tar sands of Canada and the Arctic oceans off Greenland, Russia, Canada and the US. We know the risks ofdeep waterandtar sands - we’ve been documenting the damage they do for years - and now Shell has picked up where Cairn Energy left off, leading the charge of the big oil companies into the Arctic. 

None of the oil companies inspires confidence when it comes to drilling safety: there is virtually a 100% certainty of spills when drilling for oil, but the Arctic raises even bigger worries. The US regulator - the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management - estimates a one-in-five chance of a major spill occurring in just one block of leases held by Shell in the Beaufort Sea off Alaska. This would be worrying enough, but Shell’s level of preparation for any such accident isn’t just relaxed, it’s nearly non-existent. 

Shell’s worst-case estimate for a spill has quadrupled from 5,500 barrels a day in its 2009 oil spill response plan to 25,000 barrels a day in its 2011 plan. When questioned by MPs from the parliamentary Environmental Audit Committee, Shell admitted it has no plans to test its well capping equipment in icy conditions, despite acknowledging ice may be present at the drill site. Hardly surprising, given that it's in the Arctic. 

Equally worrying for investors is the fact that, when questioned by the same committee, Shell admitted it has not calculated how much a large spill would cost to clean up, despite the serious financial repercussions a large-scale spill is likely to have. Add into the mix the fact that oil in the Arctic is likely to be less plentiful – and significantly more expensive to extract – than has been predicted by the oil industry, leading oil industry analysts Bernstein Research to conclude that "development costs [in the Arctic] will be at the high side of the industry range. Development times are likely to disappoint." 

Because of the huge environmental risks of chasing the last drops of oil – both to the Arctic itself and to the global climate – it’s not surprising that millions of people around the world are committed to stopping Shell’s Arctic expansion plans. What this report shows is that even if they don’t care about the environment, investors should be very concerned about the risks Shell is running with their money, and their future prosperity.


Facing up to the costs of stamping out GE corn - Tue, 22 May 2012 13:14:00 +0200

GE-Free Bus in ItalyImagine you stumble upon an oil spill that needs immediate attention to prevent substantial environmental damage, but even when you contact the authorities nothing happens. You feel completely lost when you realise no one cares. What do you do? Do you take matters into your own hands to try to stop the spill?

Yes, indeed – you enter private property and turn off the tap to stop the oil spill. When that is done the authorities finally act. The property owner is convicted in court as he, on purpose, started the pollution. People living in the surrounding area all support your move to take matters into your own hands. The property is seized to avoid further oil spill and authorities start checking the environmental impact of the pollution.

So problem solved, right? Not really. It is only just starting.

The property is in reality a corn field, and the oil is an illegal cultivation of genetically engineered (GE) corn (MON810), in which GE pollenwas spreading and contaminating conventional cultivationsas well as the surrounding environment.

In 2010 in the Friuli Region in northern Italy, Greenpeace activists from Italy, Austria, Germany and Hungary quarantined GE corn crops that were grown illegally.Wearing safety equipment to protect against contamination, the activists isolated, cut and secured the top of the GE corn plants, the part that contains the pollen.

Greenpeace Hungary decided to join the action in order to put pressure on its own government to uphold a GE ban that was in place in Hungary but was being threatened by multinational seed companies transporting all kinds of seeds throughout Europe. They were hoping for a very strong reaction from the Italian authorities that would encourage the Hungarian government to stand strong against increasing pressure from the bio industry.

The Greenpeace action was carried out to identify GE contamination caused by the owner of the field, who decided to sow – without authorisation – GE corn in a hidden location. Regional and national authorities did not take any measures to find the GE corn and stop the contamination, so after filing requests to all public bodies involved – from regional authorities, to the Minister of Agriculture and even reaching out to the President of the Republic (in his role of safeguarding laws and rules) – Greenpeace activists found the hidden location of the illegal cultivation and quarantined the area.

A total of 23 Greenpeace activists were arrested by police.

After this, national and regional bodies finally acted. They confiscated the fields and ordered the destruction of the illegal corn. The owner was fined 30,000 euros and locals and farmers were happy their fields were safe.

It does not end there though; in 2011 the farm was seized by the authorities in order to prevent new illegal activities, and one of the Greenpeace activists involved had all accusations of invading and occupying the corn field against him dismissed because the judge had ruled that the activist needed to act in order to prevent contamination.

In 2012 Greenpeace Italy was fined as well – 86,250 euros – because the activists entered the field. The activists are also risking a second charge because they interfered with the illegal corn in order to quarantine it.

Greenpeace Italy opposed the charges and the case is going to court.

Greenpeace believes the party that put the environment at risk is the guilty one, and not the one that prevented the contamination. During this process Greenpeace Italy has received strong support from farmers, consumer associations and many others who are ready to declare themselves co-responsible in an act of solidarity.

Saving the environment can cost you dearly. Greenpeace believes it is worth it.

Federica Ferrario, GE Campaigner, Greenpeace Italy

Further reading: Genetically Engineered Maize: The Reality Behind the Myths