Peace Maker’s Blog


Green Olympics? Lessons from Beijing
August 29, 2008, 8:13 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Beijing, China All eyes are on Beijing as we tune in to the summer Olympics to see who will get the gold. Leading up to the Olympics, China made big promises to clean up Beijing for the 2008 Olympic Games. How well did they do? Greenpeace’s new Olympic report has the answers.

China has launched impressive green policies in the run up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics, but has also missed crucial opportunities to kick start ambitious environmental initiatives across the city, says Greenpeace China in its new report ‘China after the Olympics: Lessons from Beijing’.

Download the full report here

“We are glad to see the achievements the city has made so far. It has made public transport more convenient, upgraded home heating methods, reduced, to some degree, its reliance on fossil fuel, and improved water treatment,” Greenpeace China’s Campaign Director, Lo Sze Ping, said.

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A week of bad news about the global climate crisis points up need for real solutions
August 29, 2008, 7:59 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

United States
Last week brought us a series of disturbing news stories that point up the severity of the climate crisis we’re facing: nine polar bears were spotted swimming in open waters; one of Greenland’s largest glaciers cracked, and further disintegration is feared by experts; and Fay flooded Florida with more than two feet of rain.

Meanwhile, Congressional Republicans are entering the fourth week of their sit-in on the floor of Congress, an attempt to force Speaker Pelosi to call the House of Representatives back into session and have a vote on offshore drilling legislation. By now the idea that drilling for oil off America’s coastlines would lower gas prices or even significantly wean our country off of foreign oil has been thoroughly debunked. But, in spite of mounting evidence of just how dire the climate crisis has become, they are sticking with this non-solution (repeat a lie often enough…) rather than getting behind real solutions to global warming.

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The North Sea ROCKS!
August 22, 2008, 8:54 am
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Here’s an update from Richard Page, one of our oceans campaigners, on what’s going on in the North Sea.

This week work to protect the Sylt Outer Reef resumed so that now over 100 stones have been strategically placed in order to deter what is nominally a protected area from bottom trawling and sand and gravel extraction.

The method is one which has been effectively used to protect important seagrass habitats in the Mediterranean from being trawled. Our goal is to establish a fully-protected marine reserve that will deliver real conservation and fisheries benefits and do what the German Government has failed to do – despite its international commitments to stop biodiversity loss and create a network of marine protected areas including marine reserves.

Greenpeace first published its proposal for a network of marine reserves covering 40% of the North and Baltic Seas in 2004 and has been actively campaigning for the establishment of such a network ever since. During that time scientific and political support for marine reserves has grown globally as exemplified by the establishment of large areas such as the Hawaiian National Monument (362,000 km2 )and Phoenix Islands Protected Area (410,500 km2). In Europe progress has been slow despite the support of marine biologists. In the UK the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution recommended that 30% of UK waters should be closed to fishing.

Marine reserves are by far the most powerful at our disposal for restoring the former productivity of our oceans. The North Sea, like most of the oceans, has, through overfishing and other human activities, been emptied of marine life so that what remains is a mere shadow of what was once there.

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Ridiculous image of the day
August 22, 2008, 8:44 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Take a look at the photograph on the front page of the website belonging to STUK, Finland’s nuclear watchdog.

Lovely, isn’t it?

We don’t know about you, but the first thing that comes into our minds when we think about nuclear power isn’t…

ChernobylChernobyl
(© Greenpeace/Steve Morgan)

…or…

The Olkiluoto 3 reactor, FinlandThe Olkiluoto 3 reactor, Finland
(© Greenpeace/Nick Cobbing)

…it is, of course, pretty flowers, green fields and blue skies. Isn’t that nice?

And all thanks to the so-called independent STUK.



Nuclear Reaction – Cat Power
August 22, 2008, 8:27 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Is your cat on time and on budget?Imagine your average nuclear power operator was a cat breeder. You want a cat so you go to see him. Yes, he says, I can offer you the finest pedigree cat. The best you’ve ever seen from a long line of fine cats. I can provide with you one for just $100 and it’ll be ready for collection in a month.

You go along in a month to collect your cat. Very sorry, says the cat breeder, it’s going to be another couple of weeks before you can take your cat. Oh, and by the way, the price is now $150. It can be an expensive business breeding cats, you know.

You go back two weeks later. Wouldn’t you know it? The breeder says the cat’s still not ready to leave its mother and what with unforeseen costs, it’s now $200 you owe him.

Two weeks later you return and collect the cat. You pay $250. The cat’s a sickly, shivery, little thing. It leaves a mess all over the place and makes terrible smells. It will only eat one kind of food but you’re not sure how much longer they’re going to make it and you have to buy it from that nasty man across town who you’re sure beats his family. The vet’s bills are astronomical and the pet insurance companies refuse to cover an animal that looks like it’s going to cost a fortune to keep alive.

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Hello world!
August 15, 2008, 8:49 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!