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Breaking news: Greenpeace – on the Rainbow Warrior, and on our way to Kingsnorth

Rainbow Warrior on route to Kingsnorth

The Rainbow Warrior on route to Kingsnorth coal fired power station in Kent. © Kristian Buus / Greenpeace.

See all Rainbow Warrior tour updates or get them by email.


It’s quite a sight: under a wintry sun, a flotilla of Greenpeace boats is heading down the Medway, straight towards Kingsnorth power station. The Rainbow Warrior is leading the peaceful armada and, from up here on the bridge, I can see our rigid inflatable boats abreast of us and streaming out behind in a V formation.

A couple of minutes ago, John, our executive director, phoned E.on and told them that our peaceful flotilla will be arriving at midday. Here's the mp3 or click to play:

Our amphibious incursion has a serious and peaceful purpose. The boats are carrying dozens of campaigners who plan to board Kingsnorth’s 700-metre coal jetty and then walk through the existing coal plant site to the site where E.on wants to build the UK’s first new coal plant in 30 years.

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"Four million strong, we say no to dirty coal, yes to clean energy"

The Rainbow Warrior in front of Kent Flats Wind Farm

The Rainbow Warrior in front of Kent Flats wind farm © Will Rose / Greenpeace.

See all Rainbow Warrior tour updates or get them by email.


Just a quick one to let you know that we've just left Southend pier and are heading towards Chatham, to pick up the leaders of the UK's most important development, faith and environment groups - including the Women's Institute, Oxfam, Tearfund and RSPB - representing four million people.

From Chatham, we'll be sailing towards Kingsnorth, where the directors will sign a declaration saying: "Four million strong, we say no to dirty coal power stations, and yes to a clean green renewable energy future". The declaration will then be taken to Kingsnorth by one of our inflatable boats and delivered by hand to E.on staff.

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The (Not Very) Weekly Geek: Wave power

EfficienCity - wave power

A screengrab from our virtual, climate-friendly town, EfficienCity

With the UK government apparently bending over backwards to stop renewable energy development at the moment, it's refreshing to hear some good news from elsewhere in Europe; the world's first commercial wave power farm has gone live in Portugal.

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UK sabotages European renewables deal - again

Solar panels

Just under a year ago, we revealed that Gordon Brown was planning to scupper the vital, and binding, European climate change deal to generate 20 per cent of energy from renewable sources by 2020.

A brouhaha ensued; EU leaders were so furious at the UK's underhanded shenanigans that a red-faced Brown had to explicitly re-commit to the target soon afterwards.

Well, leaked documents (pdf) show it's happened again. This time, the man weilding the wrecking ball is John Hutton, the Business Secretary with an inordinate fondness for coal and nuclear power.

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Are energy utilities "doing an IBM" by ignoring solar opportunity?

A new report claims solar PV will dominate global energy industry – and, like IBM's infamous early failure to exploit the emerging PC market, energy utilities look set to miss out.

Original Article Link
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Al Gore and the new American Dream

More good news on the renewables front today: Al Gore has challenged the US to produce 100 per cent of its power from renewable sources in 10 years.

Gore has pitched his plan as the solution to not only climate change but also to high oil prices and energy insecurity - and as a way to keep the US economy healthy and to ensure national security.

A few of my favourite bits (the full text is here):

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The Weekly Geek: micro-hydro power

Micro-hydro power

It's Weekly Geek time, and this week we're looking at micro-hydro power: a truly reliable, highly efficient, and extremely clean (it has no direct carbon emissions) way of generating electricity.

It needs no fuel but offers a constant supply of electricity which often increases in winter, along with demand. It has a long life cycle (typically 25 years or more). It can have low implementation and maintenance costs. And, unlike some large scale hydroelectric power schemes, it has minimal environmental and visual impacts.

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Welcome to The Weekly Geek: decentralised energy

This CHP plant in Denmark is 95 per cent efficient

This combined heat and power plant in Denmark is up to 95 per cent efficient

To celebrate our launch of EfficienCity, we're starting a new, weekly column for all the closet energy geeks out there. Every week, we'll take an in-depth look at one of the technologies we feature in EfficienCity - tidal power, wave power, wind energy, combined heat and power, micro-hydro power, anaerobic digestion, biomass and the rest. We'll also be looking at issues like baseload and the regulatory context for decentralised energy.

So remember to check back each Wednesday and, if you have any suggestions for energy solutions to climate change you'd like to see us cover, just post a comment at the bottom of this page and we'll try to slot it in.

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Germany steps closer to the 100% renewables dream

New coal, new nuclear - the government here seems to be doing everything in its power to avoid facing up to the reality that our energy system is archaic, our energy policy is a disaster, and the new large-scale, centralised coal and nuclear power plants they want won't stop climate change or ensure energy security.

But at least we can glean hope from a more forward thinking European neighbour. Scientists have proved that Germany - which is already way ahead of us on renewables (14 per cent in 2007) - can power itself entirely by renewable energy sources. Completely. 100 per cent.

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Revealed - Brown's plans to scupper European climate deal

23 Oct 2007

Gordon Brown is secretly plotting to scupper a vital European climate change deal in a manner reminiscent of George Bush's attacks on the Kyoto Protocol.

According to today's Guardian, the prime minister is seeking an alliance with reactionary allies in Europe, including Poland's climate-sceptic President Kaczynski, in an effort to ditch the EU commitment to generate 20 per cent of our energy from renewable sources by 2020. The deal, signed earlier this year by Tony Blair, forms a vital pillar in European efforts to slash greenhouse gas emissions.

The Brown government privately accepts Britain can meet the ambitious EU renewable energy target but regards it as a threat to plans for new nuclear power stations and to the growth of a carbon trading market in London’s financial quarter.

Greenpeace executive director John Sauven said:

"Blair was far from perfect on climate change but he did at least sign Britain up to the momentous 20 per cent renewable energy target and try to position the UK as a world leader on global warming. Now, within months of taking office, Brown is trying to ditch the target and make Britain the climate spoiler. He knows we can meet this target but he still wants to scupper the deal in order to keep the nuclear industry happy."

Attempts to scupper the 20 per cent renewable energy target would meet strong resistance from Germany and other EU states. In the last six years Germany has increased its percentage of renewable electricity from 6 per cent to 12 per cent compared to the UK which has gone from 2.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent despite having the best wind resource in Europe. In the same period, the percentage of Germany's total energy use generated by renewables has gone up from 3.8 per cent to 8 per cent, while the UK has gone from 1 per cent to 2 per cent. As a consequence Germany has created a quarter of a million jobs in renewables - a number that is growing fast. Britain has only 25,000 jobs in renewables, a number that represents the amount of jobs created by Germany in the past year alone.

For more, contact the Greenpeace press office on 0207 865 8255.