Email Print

Finally, France supports trade ban on bluefin tuna

tuna.jpg

At last, France has officially announced support for an international trade ban on Atlantic bluefin. This is great news. It means that 23 out of the 27 EU countries now support the species being protected by CITES (the organisation which regulates trade in endangered species). It also means there is no longer any effective block to stop the EU reaching a common position (at a previous vote, it had been blocked by the Mediterranean countries).

Two of the main fishing nations, Italy and France are supporting the trade ban, and Italy has already declared it is suspending its own fishery. That is pretty momentous. It's as if the proverbial turkeys have just voted for Christmas by a landslide.

Read more »
Tags:
Email Print

Video: Ben up a chimney - "Politicians talk, leaders act"

From the top of an Italian smokestack, Ben explains why we're telling G8 leaders to act now on the climate. We need strong leadership - what comes out of the G8 paves the wya for the upcoming Copenhange UN climate summit in December, which is the best moment of opportunity for averting dangerous climate change.

Read more »

Tags:
Email Print

Video: Activists paint a coal ship near Venice

Day two on the coal occupation in Italy. In Marghera, near Venice, the occupation continues, with activists on the coal conveyor and the chimney painting 'G8: LEAD OR LOSE'. More activists are also occupying the cranes on the wharf, stopping a coal ship – the Bulk Brasil – from unloading its cargo from South Africa.

Tell Ed Miliband what you'll do if he consents a new dirty coal plant at Kingsnorth in Kent: Sign up for The Big If

Read more »
Tags:
Email Print

Day two on the coal occupation in Italy

Italy Set 1f

High above the Venice lagoon, Greenpeace demand strong climate leadership. from the G8.

Just as our tired activists in Italy were starting to settle in for a long night on top of the coal power stations yesterday, we got word that Greenpeace climbers in the US had rappelled down the face of Mount Rushmore with a banner that challenges Obama to show real leadership on climate change at the G8 this week.

Read more »
Tags:
Email Print

Live from Abe Lincoln's forehead... activists call on President Obama to show leadership


Note - the live broadcast is no longer running.

We need to see real action from world leaders this year if we are going to save our climate. That's why over 100 Greenpeace activists from 15 countries occupied four coal-fired power stations across Italy today and they're demanding that the G8 Heads of State take decisive leadership on climate change. You can follow live updates from the Italy here.

And now our friends in the US have climbed Mount Rushmore and are challenging President Obama to be a leader on climate change, and they are broadcasting it live. The signal drops out occasionally, but when it works - wow. The park authorities have just reach the top of the monument.

The UK can set an example for the world by putting an end to new dirty coal-fired power plants. Tell Ed Miliband what you'll do if he consents a new dirty coal plant at Kingsnorth in Kent: The Big If

Tags:
Email Print

Video: Greenpeace occupy four Italian coal power stations

Tell Ed Miliband what you'll do if he consents a new dirty coal plant at Kingsnorth in Kent: The Big If

Read more »

Tags:
Email Print

As the G8 opens, Greenpeace occupy four Italian coal-fired power stations

Italy Set 1d

High above the Venice archipelago, activists demand strong climate action from the G8.

As the leaders of the world's most powerful nations arrived at the G8 Summit today, over 100 Greenpeace activists from around the world have occupied four coal-fired power stations across Italy, demanding the G8 Heads of State take leadership on climate change.


Listen to an interview with Greenpeace campaigner Ben Stewart, perched on a chimney above Venice:


Follow the live feed from the action here, and on twitter: @greenpeaceuk

Read more »
Tags:
Email Print

Activists urge Italy to quit coal

Activists fron Arctic Sunrise take the "Quit Coal" message to Sardinia

As the Rainbow Warrior arrives here to embark on the UK leg of of her worldwide "Quit Coal" tour, activists from another of our ships, Arctic Sunrise, have been busy putting coal in the hot seat in Italy.

"Small variations in global temperatures have vast consequences. The last Ice Age was only six degrees colder than today. A global rise of just 0.8 degrees has melted the Arctic."
Johann Hari: Don't kill the planet in the name of saving the economy »

Five of them scaled a 150 metre crane at a new coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia, near Rome, to drop a banner highlighting the fact that Italian government policy effectively opposes the Kyoto Protocol. Meanwhile another five activists painted "No Carbon" and "Quit Coal" in giant letters on the power plant's dock from an inflatable boat.

Read more »
Tags:
Email Print

Illegal timber imports into Europe: what we are doing to stop this trade

Protesters dressed as gorillas blockade a shipload of illegal rainforest timber entering the port of Livorno, Italy

As a major market for tropical hardwood, the European Union plays a key role in the international trade in illegal and destructively sourced timber. Yet, currently no laws in Europe allow authorities to seize shipments of illegally logged timber, nor hold importers and traders of illegal timber accountable. These traders remain free to profit from forest destruction.

Read more »
Tags:
Email Print

Greenpeace boards ship importing rainforest destruction to Italy

13 Oct 2005
Protesters dressed as gorillas blockade a shipload of illegal rainforest timber entering the port of Livorno , Italy
Protesters dressed as gorillas blockade a shipload of illegal rainforest timber entering the port of Livorno , Italy
Today (Rome - 11th October 2005) 30 Greenpeace activists boarded a ship carrying rainforest timber at the Italian port of Livorno. Eight activists, dressed as gorillas, climbed two of the ship's cranes to prevent its cargo from being unloaded.

The 'Guan He Kou' is carrying sawn timber from the Congo Basin, where widespread illegal logging is destroying the forest and driving gorillas and chimpanzees towards extinction. The rainforest is also home to millions of indigenous people who depend on the forest for their survival.

Greenpeace International's Forest Campaigner, Belinda Fletcher, said: "Stolen rainforest timber is flooding into ports in Italy and across Europe almost daily. It ends up on construction sites and is being sold in high street stores (1). If this criminal activity is not stopped, the world's rainforests look set to disappear in our lifetime and the only forest elephants, lowland gorillas and chimpanzees left will be in zoos."

The ship's timber cargo was logged by a Cameroonian timber company, Société Industrielle de Mbang (SIM), which is partly financed by Italian capital. (2) The rainforests of the Congo Basin are rapidly being decimated by the logging industry, which is notoriously corrupt in the region. During field investigations to Cameroon in 2005, Greenpeace discovered that SIM is illegally logging outside the boundaries of its cutting permit. It also gathered extensive evidence that SIM buys timber from other companies heavily involved in illegal logging. (3)

Last year, Cameroon exported approximately £400 million worth of timber to countries across Europe. Italy is one of its main customers buying sawn wood, logs, veneer and mouldings. Other key importers are Spain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Ireland and Germany. (4) When it leaves Italy, the 'Guan He Kou' and her cargo will go to Spain.

Life on Earth depends on ancient forests for its survival but only 20 per cent of the world's original forest remains intact. These last forests are threatened by the international demand for cheap timber, yet there are no laws in Europe to allow the authorities to seize shipments of illegally logged timber products, or to oblige companies to make sure their timber is not from illegal or destructive sources.

Greenpeace is calling on European governments to outlaw all imports of illegal timber and to promote environmentally and socially responsible forest management worldwide. Illegal logging and related trade is expected to be on the agenda of the Agriculture Council of the EU on the 24-25th October.

Greenpeace is an independent, campaigning organization, which uses non-violent, creative communication tools to put the spotlight on global environmental problems, and to drive towards solutions essential for a green and peaceful future.

Notes to Editor
  1. Consumers can guarantee that the timber products come from well-managed sources, by buying products carrying the logo of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).
  2. Shareholders of SIM include the Italian timber companies Piarottolegno and Dassi.
  3. In 2005, Greenpeace field investigators visited SIM's cutting permit (Vente de Coupe 08-10-73) in the Mbam & Kim department in the Centre province of Cameroon. They documented large scale illegal logging activities by SIM outside the legal boundaries of its allocated permit. Greenpeace estimates that SIM has logged at least 850 hectares illegally in this area. Investigators also found that the SIM/TIB sawmill is sourcing timber from two permits held by other Cameroonian companies, FIAM and Topaze, whose permits are widely considered to be illegal in Cameroon. For more information click here to download a briefing document (PDF format)..
  4. Rupert Oliver & Emily Fripp, Changing International Markets For Timber: What African Producers Can do, African Timber Trade Forums, Producer Country Draft Cameroon, May-July 2005, section 1.2.
Further contact information for reporters to get video, photos or report details

Images of today's action and Africa's 'Great Ape' rainforest are available on request.

Photos: John Novis on (M) +31 6 5381 9121
Video: Maarten van Rouveroy on +31 (0) 20 718 2208 or (M) +31 646 197 322
Press:
  • Matilda Bradshaw
    Ottho Heldringstraat 5
    1066 AZ Amsterdam
    Telephone: +31 (0)6 5350 4701
  • Belinda Fletcher, Greenpeace International Forest Campaigner on +44 207 865 8225