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Greenpeace volunteers take on climate change with spades and shovels

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.

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Rainbow Warrior blocks New Zealand coal shipment

The Rainbow Warrior blocks the State Owned Enterprise Solid Energy's coal ship the Hellenic Sea from leaving the Port of Lyttelton. The 225-metre bulker carries up to 60 thousand tonnes of export coal.

This week the Rainbow Warrior marked the start of a six week 'Target Climate Change' tour of New Zealand with an action against the Hellenic Sea, a 60,000 tonne bulk carrier owned by coal exporter Solid Energy. While it trades on NZ's clean green credentials the government is making millions of dollars from Solid Energy peddling coal on the world market - quite literally stoking the fires of climate change.

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Stop Esso campaign spreads across the globe

Stop Esso campaign spreads across the globe

Esso garage closed by Greenpeace

In 2002, action against Esso got well underway in the USA, Europe and New Zealand, as Greenpeace activists around the world joined in the protest.

MAY 2002

United States: Greenpeace USA launches it's campaign against the richest company in the planet.

Canada: Greenpeace activists lock themselves to fuel pumps at Esso stations in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal, while volunteers in Bush masks urge motorists not to buy Esso.

New Zealand: Greenpeace issues "A Decade of Dirty Tricks" report outlining how Esso has undermined international climate change policy.







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Antarctic expedition leader hits out at 'silent Straw'

16 Jan 2002
Southern oceans Japanese whaling hunt

Southern oceans Japanese whaling hunt

The British leader of an international team in the Antarctic has demanded that Jack Straw 'gets serious about Japan's efforts to secure a return to full-scale commercial whaling' after the Foreign Secretary failed to publicly condemn attempts by the Japanese government's use of development aid to buy votes in support of commercial whaling.

The attack comes as a new report is published revealing that the Japanese government has spent tens of millions of US dollars buying up the votes of small nation states in the International Whaling Commission (IWC).

Kieran Mulvaney is the head of a team aboard the Greenpeace vessel MV Arctic Sunrise. He was speaking today from Melbourne after the vessel docked following a two month expedition to take non-violent direct action against the Japanese whaling fleet in the Antarctic. He is deeply concerned by his own government's silence over the Japanese government's vote buying policy.

The government of New Zealand has publicly condemned Japan's manipulation of the IWC, but Jack Straw has pointedly failed to speak out against vote buying. Mr Straw met Japanese foreign minister Makiko Tanaka last week, while foreign office minister Denis MacShane has announced a new 'Green Alliance' between Japan and the UK, yet there is no indication that the UK will condemn the Japanese government's dollar diplomacy.

Today Mulvaney said: "These days more than ever we hear our politicians talking about the sanctity of international law, and yet when a major nation like Japan brazenly admits to engaging in bribery to subvert an international treaty, we don't even hear a squeak of public disapproval. Now we've discovered the sums they're willing to spend to secure a return to full-scale whaling, it's time Jack Straw spoke up for the law and against Japanese vote buying."

Last year Maseyuku Komatsu, a senior official from the Fisheries Agency of Japan, admitted to Australian broadcaster ABC that his government secures votes in the International Whaling Commission (IWC) with promises of Overseas Development Aid. Now the new research, published today, reveals the staggering sums passing hands in the campaign to overturn the ban on commercial whaling.

According to the new report, the Japanese government has spent more than $320m trying to overturn the whaling ban. It spent $47m last year alone, buying up the votes of six countries. The donations are described by the Fisheries Agency of Japan as 'fisheries aid grants,' but the Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda has admitted that the money is in return for voting with Japan on whaling issues. Recent fisheries aid grants from Japan to Caribbean countries total in excess of $124m, while subsidies for research whaling amount to $113m. The figures were calculated following an appraisal of official Overseas Development Aid figures and publications from Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research.

The report, published by Greenpeace, reveals that more than $24m has gone to Antigua and Barbuda and Guinea alone. On top of international bribes, the Japanese government has hired international lobbyists and the services of the UK PR firm Lehmann Communications, as well as paying for high profile advertising campaigns.

Mulvaney added: "For weeks now I've watched as the whaling fleet fires explosive harpoons into a protected species, despite the ban. Now Japan is buying a return to full blown commercial whaling and Straw won't comment. It's time he spoke out. His silence so far has been deafening."

The International Whaling Commission - the global body responsible for the management of whaling - meets this year in Japan amid fears that the Japanese government's vote buying policy has amassed enough support to begin the process of overturning the ban on whaling.

Notes to editors:

  1. Full breakdown of figures and full report available on request.
  2. Kieran Mulvaney can be interviewed aboard the MV Arctic Sunrise.
  3. Six Caribbean countries with little interest in the whaling issue vote with Tokyo on virtually every motion. Each has received millions of dollars in Japanese aid.
  4. This May the IWC will meet in Shiminoseki - the home port of the Japanese whaling fleet.

Further information:
Greenpeace UK press office on 020 7865 8255

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Pacific nation fears devastation from the ocean

wave energy:  a green and sustainable energy resource

wave energy: a green and sustainable energy resource

A tiny South Pacific nation is planning to evacuate the islands because of rising sea levels. Tuvalu has asked Australia and New Zealand for help in resettling its 11,000 people. The government says the islands may be engulfed in 50 years.

A Tuvaluan government spokesman says New Zealand has agreed to help but there have been no guarantees from Australia.


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