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===Current priorities===
===Current priorities===
Below is a list of Greenpeace's current priorities, as of March 2007:
Below is a list of Greenpeace's current priorities, as of March 2008 BCE:
* Stopping [[climate change]] ([[global warming]]), - [http://www.greenpeace.org/climate Greenpeace Climate page],
* Stopping [[climate change]] ([[global warming]]), - [http://www.greenpeace.org/climate Greenpeace Climate page],
* Preserving the [[oceans]] (including stopping [[whaling]] and [[bottom trawling]]), - [http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/oceans Greenpeace Oceans page]
* Preserving the [[oceans]] (including stopping [[whaling]] and [[bottom trawling]]), - [http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/oceans Greenpeace Oceans page]
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* Promoting [[sustainable agriculture]] (and opposing [[Genetic Engineering|GE]]), - [http://www.greenpeace.org/ge Greenpeace GE page]
* Promoting [[sustainable agriculture]] (and opposing [[Genetic Engineering|GE]]), - [http://www.greenpeace.org/ge Greenpeace GE page]
* Eliminating [[toxics|toxic]] chemicals (including from [[E-waste]]), many of which are [[carcinogens]]. - [http://www.greenpeace.org/toxics Greenpeace Toxics page]
* Eliminating [[toxics|toxic]] chemicals (including from [[E-waste]]), many of which are [[carcinogens]]. - [http://www.greenpeace.org/toxics Greenpeace Toxics page]
* Reducing economic stability and viability of industries.
* Increasing the population of [[Greenpeace]] members by using Green Sex, a method where every orgasm leaves a carbon footprint and thus must be offset by planting six grass seeds.


==Greenpeace Thinktank==
==Greenpeace Thinktank==

Revision as of 00:16, 23 January 2008

Greenpeace
Founded1971, Vancouver, BC, Canada
FocusEnvironmentalism
Area served
Global
MethodNonviolence, Lobbying, Research, Innovation
Websitewww.greenpeace.org
Greenpeace protest against Esso / Exxon Mobil.

Greenpeace is an environmental activist group founded in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in 1971 to oppose the United States testing nuclear devices in Alaska. The focus of the organization later turned to other environmental issues, and it has become known for its campaigns against whaling, bottom trawling, global warming, ancient forest destruction, nuclear power, and genetic engineering. Greenpeace has national and regional offices in 42 countries worldwide, all of which are affiliated to the Amsterdam-based Greenpeace International. The global organization receives its income through the individual contributions of an estimated 2.8 million financial supporters, as well as from grants from charitable foundations.

Mission statement

On its official website, Greenpeace defines its mission as the following:

Greenpeace is a global campaigning organisation that acts to change attitudes and behaviour, to protect and conserve the environment and to promote peace by:

Catalysing an energy revolution to address the number one threat facing our planet: climate change.
Defending our oceans by challenging wasteful and destructive fishing, and creating a global network of marine reserves.
Protecting the world’s remaining ancient forests and the animal, plants and people that depend on them.
Working for disarmament and peace by reducing dependence on finite resources and calling for the elimination of all nuclear weapons.
Creating a toxic free future with safer alternatives to hazardous chemicals in today's products and manufacturing.
Supporting sustainable agriculture by encouraging socially and ecologically responsible farming practices..[1]

Structure

Greenpeace is a global environmental organization,that consists of Greenpeace International (Stichting Greenpeace Council) in Amsterdam and 27 national and regional offices around the world, providing a presence in 41 countries. These national and regional offices are largely autonomous in carrying out jointly agreed global campaign strategies within the local context they operate in, and in seeking the necessary financial support from donors to fund this work.[2] National and regional offices support a network of volunteer-run local groups. Local groups participate in campaigns in their area, and mobilize for larger protests and activities elsewhere. Millions of supporters who are not organized into local groups support Greenpeace by making financial donations and participating in campaigns as citizens and consumers.

Greenpeace's national offices.

National and regional offices

Greenpeace is present in the following countries and regions, as of March 2007:

Argentina, Australia-Pacific region (Australia, Fiji, Papua New-Guinea, Solomon Islands), Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greenpeace Nordic (Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden), Greece, Greenpeace Central and Eastern Europe (Austria, Hungary, Slovak Republic, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro and Bosnia (no permanent campaign presence in the latter five states)) India, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Greenpeace Mediterranean (Israel, Cyprus, Lebanon, Malta, Tunisia, Turkey), Mexico, the Netherlands, Greenpeace Aotearoa New Zealand (New Zealand), Russia, South-East Asia (Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand), Spain, Switzerland, United Kingdom, and the United States.

Priorities and campaigns

Greenpeace runs campaigns and projects which fit into the "Issues" (as campaign areas are called within Greenpeace) categories below. Besides exposing problems such as over-fishing or threats linked to nuclear energy such as harmful radiation and proliferation, Greenpeace campaigns for alternative solutions such as marine reserves and renewable energy.

The organization currently addresses many environmental issues with a primary focus on efforts to stop global warming and the preservation of the world's oceans and ancient forests. In addition to conventional environmental organization methods, such as lobbying businesses and politicians and participating in international conferences, Greenpeace uses nonviolent direct action in many of its campaigns.

Greenpeace uses direct action to attract attention to particular environmental problems. For example, activists place themselves between the whaler's harpoon and their prey, or invade nuclear facilities dressed as barrels of radioactive waste. Other initiatives include the development of a fuel-efficient car, the SmILE.

Current priorities

Below is a list of Greenpeace's current priorities, as of March 2008 BCE:

Greenpeace Thinktank

Think-tanks, under the Greenpeace umbrella, propose blueprints for world's transition to renewable energy. The focus is to reduce carbon emissions without compromising on economic growth. The Solar Generation project [3], conceived in 2000 by Greenpeace and the European Photo- voltaic Industry Association (EPIA), addresses major energy challenges facing the global society and charts out the solar energy remedies until 2050. Greenpeace thinktanks also focus on individual nation's energy scenarios: for example, Greenpeace has published scenarios where renewable resources like solar can become the backbone of the economies of developing countries like India, by 2050. [4][5]

History

Origins

The origins of Greenpeace lie in the Peace movement and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament generally and particularly in the Don't Make A Wave Committee co-founded by Jim and Marie Bohlen and formed by an assortment of Canadian and expatriate American peace activists in Vancouver in 1970. Taking its name from a slogan used during protests against United States nuclear testing in late 1969, the Committee had come together with the objective of stopping a U.S. nuclear bomb test codenamed Cannikin beneath the Aleutian island of Amchitka, Alaska.

Many of the founding members were members of the Society of Friends. [citation needed] The committee was affiliated with the Sierra Club but it withdrew its support when Jim Bohlen, a member of the committee, told journalists that the committee would send a boat to Amchitka to protest the nuclear test without it having been approved by the Sierra Club.

The first ship expedition, inspired by the voyages of the Golden Rule, Phoenix and Everyman in 1958, was on the chartered west coast fishing vessel, the "Phyllis Cormack", owned and sailed by John Cormack of Vancouver, and called the Greenpeace I; the second expedition was nicknamed Greenpeace Too!.[6] The test was not prevented, but the voyage laid the groundwork for Greenpeace's later activities.

Early influential people

Bill Darnell has received the credit for combining the words "green" and "peace", thereby giving the organization its future name. [citation needed] Irving Stowe a member of the Society of Friends can probably be described as the father of Greenpeace [citation needed] and introduced the concepts of nonviolence and bearing witness. Robert Hunter was a media guru and spiritual and organisational leader. Ben Metcalfe became the first Chairman of the Greenpeace Foundation and with wife Dorothy managed the media for the first few years. Dr Patrick Moore was the ecologist of note and served for nine years as President of Greenpeace Canada, as well as seven years as a Director of Greenpeace International. Rod Marining's campaign saved the entrance to Vancouver's Stanley Park, he was on the first voyage to Amchitka and was a board member during the 1970's. Captain Paul Watson was involved in the very early days of Greenpeace as a 1st director, and led the Harp Seal Campaigns but later founded Sea Shepherd and sank the pirate-whaler Sierra in 1979 and has gone on to lead multiple direct-action campaigns saving endangered marine animals the world over. Lyle Thurston was medical doctor on the first voyage and served on the board during the 1970s.

Campaigns

On 4 May 1972, following Dorothy Stowe's departure from the chairmanship of the Don't Make A Wave Committee, the fledgling environmental group officially changed its name to the "Greenpeace Foundation".

In 1972 the yacht Vega a 12.5-metre (41 ft) ketch owned by David McTaggart, (an eventual spokesman for Greenpeace International), was renamed Greenpeace III and sailed in an anti nuclear protest into the exclusion zone at Mururoa in French Polynesia to attempt to disrupt French atmospheric nuclear testing. This voyage was sponsored and organised by the New Zealand branch of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. [7] CNDNZ and the NZ Peace media had been lobbying the New Zealand Government and the New Zealand public to place pressure on Britain and France to agree to enforce a nuclear test ban in the South Pacific since the mid 1950s. This pressure through civil disobedience protests in French Polynesia and public education at home, eventually resulted in New Zealand declaring itself a nuclear-free zone by legislation in 1987. (New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament, and Arms Control Act 1987). [8] In 1974 La Flor, from Melbourne, Australia, skippered by Rolf Heimann, a children's author set out for Mururoa via New Zealand as Greenpeace IV but arrived after the final nuclear test for the year. The French Military conducted more than 200 nuclear tests, (40 of them atmospheric), at Mururoa and Fangataufa atolls over a thirty year period ending 1996.

In 1974 the Vancouver based Greenpeace Foundation mounted an anti-whaling campaign that encountered Soviet whalers over the Seamounts off Mendocino, California. This campaign had been influenced by the work of Paul Spong and Farley Mowat and Robert Hunter's encounter with the Orca Skana.

In 1976 a campaign was launched against the killing and skinning of foxes in Newfoundland for the high fashion fur trade, targeting Norwegian ships engaged in the trade after receiving a hostile welcome from the Newfoundland fishermen involved in the hunt. Greenpeace used helicopters to move people and supplies to a base camp at Belle Isle. Brigitte Bardot later involved herself in this campaign to great effect. In the same year another anti-whaling expedition using the James Bay as Greenpeace VII disrupted the Soviet fleet again, but this time with the assistance of a "deep throat" source and extra funding from Ed Daly of World Airways. At about the same time visits to Japan were arranged to persuade the Japanese people that whaling should be ended.

By the late 1970s, spurred by the global reach of what Robert Hunter called "mind bombs", in which images of confrontation on the high seas converted diffuse and complex issues into considerably more media-friendly David versus Goliath-style narratives, more than 20 groups across North America,Europe, New Zealand and Australia had adopted the name "Greenpeace".

Greenpeace also engaged with their opponents through the courts both in Canada (defending a loitering charge for failing to leave a fisheries office) and in France (David McTaggart's Law of the Sea case to recover repair costs after his yacht Vega was damaged by the French navy).

Similarly, Greenpeace became involved with lobbying elected officials and various bodies such as the United Nations through events such as the Conference on the Human Environment and with the International Whaling Commission.

On August 21, 2007, Yvo de Boer, head of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), angered environmental groups due to his suggestion that "rich nations should be absolved from the need to cut emissions if they pay developing countries to do it on their behalf". Doug Parr of Greenpeace opposed Mr. de Boer's suggestion - "The current trading system is not delivering emissions reductions as it is" ... "Expanding it like this to give rich countries a completely free hand will simply not work."[9] On August 22, 2007, the Philippine Department of Energy's plan to develop nuclear energy as an alternative source of power was opposed by Von Hernandez, campaign director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, who warned that exploring nuclear options to bolster energy demand is “dangerous and misleading.” He cited the risks of accidents like Chernobyl or the most recent Kashiwazaki nuclear plant leak in Japan after an earthquake are real.[10]

Formation of formal global organization

In 1979, however, the original Vancouver-based Greenpeace Foundation encountered financial difficulties, and disputes between offices over fund-raising and organizational direction split the global movement[11]. David McTaggart lobbied the Canadian Greenpeace Foundation to accept a new structure which would bring the scattered Greenpeace offices under the auspices of a single global organization, and on October 14 1979, Greenpeace International came into existence. Under the new structure, the local offices would contribute a percentage of their income to the international organization, which would take responsibility for setting the overall direction of the movement.

Greenpeace's transformation from a loose international network to a global organization enabled it to apply the full force of its resources to a small number of environmental issues deemed of global significance, owed much to McTaggart's personal vision. McTaggart summed up his approach in a 1994 memo: "No campaign should be begun without clear goals; no campaign should be begun unless there is a possibility that it can be won; no campaign should be begun unless you intend to finish it off". McTaggart's own assessment of what could and couldn't be won, and how, frequently caused controversy.

In re-shaping Greenpeace as a centrally coordinated, hierarchical organization, McTaggart went against the anti-authoritarian ethos that prevailed in other environmental organizations that came of age in the 1970s. While this pragmatic structure granted Greenpeace the persistence and narrow focus necessary to match forces with government and industry, it would lead to the recurrent criticism that Greenpeace had adopted the same methods of governance as its chief foes — the multinational corporations. Its current Executive Director is Gerd Leipold. [12]

For smaller actions, and continuous local promotion and activism, Greenpeace has networks of active supporters that coordinate their efforts through national offices. The United Kingdom has some 6,000 Greenpeace activists.

Greenpeace ships

Since Greenpeace was founded, seagoing ships have played a vital role in its campaigns.

In 1978, Greenpeace launched the original Rainbow Warrior, a 40-metre (130 ft), former fishing trawler named for the Cree legend that inspired early activist Robert Hunter on the first voyage to Amchitka. Greenpeace purchased the Rainbow Warrior (originally launched as the Sir William Hardy in 1955) at a cost of £40,000, and volunteers restored and refitted her over a period of four months.

First deployed to disrupt the hunt of the Icelandic whaling fleet, the Rainbow Warrior would quickly become a mainstay of Greenpeace campaigns. Between 1978 and 1985, crew members also engaged in non-violent direct action against the ocean-dumping of toxic and radioactive waste, the Grey Seal hunt in Orkney and nuclear testing in the Pacific. Japan's Fisheries Agency has labeled Greenpeace ships as "anti-whaling vessels" and "environmental terrorists"[13].

In 1985, the Rainbow Warrior entered into the waters surrounding Moruroa atoll, site of French nuclear testing. The sinking of the Rainbow Warrior occurred when the French government secretly bombed the ship in a New Zealand harbour on orders from François Mitterrand himself; killing Dutch freelance photographer Fernando Pereira, who thought it was safe to enter the boat to get his photographic material after a first small explosion, but drowned as a result of a second, larger explosion. The attack was a public relations disaster for France, after it was quickly exposed by the New Zealand police. The French Government in 1987 agreed to pay New Zealand compensation of NZ$13 million and formally apologised for the bombing. The French Government also paid 2.3 million compensation to the family of the killed photographer.

In 1989 Greenpeace commissioned a replacement vessel, also named the Rainbow Warrior, which remains in service today as the flagship of the Greenpeace fleet.

In 1996 the Greenpeace vessel MV Sirius was detained by Dutch police while protesting the import of genetically modified soybeans due to the violation of a temporary sailing prohibition, which was implemented because the Sirius prevented their unloading. The ship, but not the captain, was released a half hour later.

In 2005 the Rainbow Warrior II ran aground on and damaged the Tubbataha Reef in the Philippines, while she was ironically on a mission to protect the very same reef.[14] Greenpeace was fined $7,000 USD for damaging the reef and agreed to pay the fine, although they said that the Philippines government had given them outdated charts.

Along with the Rainbow Warrior the Greenpeace organisation has four other ships:

Criticism

Greenpeace has been variously criticized for being too radical (or alarmist), too mainstream (or not alarmist enough), for having itself incurred real or perceived environmental damage in its activities, and for valuing nonhuman causes over human causes by governments, industry and political lobbyists, and other environmental groups.

  • In November of 2007, Greenpeace attracted internet attention when they held an online poll to name 30 humpback whales in the South Pacific Ocean. Mister Splashy Pants won, thanks to massive numbers of voters from social networking sites, sparking the "Save Mister Splashypants" campaign.

See also

References

  1. ^ Greenpeace International. "Our mission".
  2. ^ Greenpeace International. "How is Greenpeace structured?".
  3. ^ Solar Generation
  4. ^ Greenpeace announces comprehensive energy strategy for India to tackle Climate Change without compromising economic development
  5. ^ Energy (R)evolution: A sustainable Energy Outlook for India
  6. ^ Discover Vancouver. The Greenpeace Story
  7. ^ Making Waves the Greenpeace New Zealand Story by Michael Szabo ISBN
  8. ^ Nuclear Free: The New Zealand Way, The Right Honourable David Lange, Penguin Books, New Zealand,1990.
  9. ^ BBC NEWS, Rich 'can pay poor to cut carbon'
  10. ^ ABS-CBN Interactive, Greenpeace opposes nuke power option
  11. ^ Waves of Compassion. The founding of Greenpeace. by Rex Weyler p.4. Retrieved on May 8 2007
  12. ^ http://www.greenpeace.org/international/about/how-is-greenpeace-structured/management/executive-director
  13. ^ Greenpeace Rejects Terrorism Label, 14 December 2001
  14. ^ BBC News. Greenpeace fined for reef damage. 1 November 2005.

Further reading

  • David McTaggart with Robert Hunter, Greenpeace III: Journey into the Bomb (London: William Collins Sons & Co., 1978). ISBN 0 211885 8
  • Robert Hunter, Warriors of the Rainbow: A Chronicle of the Greenpeace Movement (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1979). ISBN 0-03-043736-9
  • Michael King, Death of the Rainbow Warrior (Penguin Books, 1986). ISBN 0-14-009738-4
  • John McCormick, The Global Environmental Movement (John Wiley, 1995)
  • David Robie, Eyes of Fire: The Last Voyage of the Rainbow Warrior (Philadelphia: New Society Press, 1987). ISBN 0-86571-114-3
  • Michael Brown and John May, The Greenpeace Story (1989; London and New York: Dorling Kindersley, Inc., 1991). ISBN 1-879431-02-5
  • Rex Weyler (2004), Greenpeace: How a Group of Ecologists, Journalists and Visionaries Changed the World, Rodale
  • Kieran Mulvaney and Mark Warford (1996): Witness: Twenty-Five Years on the Environmental Front Line, Andre Deutsch.