30/12/2005
- International — A look back over the last twelve months,
starring jaguar suited activists, corporate skulduggery
and heroics in unequal measures, politicians' finding/losing
the plot and even an embassy for whales.
Way back in January, two corporate villains where hogging
the limelight. Star bad guy Monsanto added bribery to
their litany of environmental crimes. Desperate to get
its dodgy GE cotton planted in Indonesia it paid bribes
for officials to 'forget' about pesky details like an
environmental impact assessment. Caught red handed the
corporation that claims "integrity, honesty and decency"
had to pay a US$1.5m fine.
On the other side of the world we
highlighted how Kimberly Clark, makers of the famous Kleenex
tissue, makes millions from destroying ancient forests
to make tissues destined to be flushed down the toilet.
Despite the absurdity of turning thousand year old trees
into toilet paper and other tissue products, Kimberly
Clark continues to proudly boast that its products contains
no recycled paper.
In February, the one and currently
only, global effort to tackle global warming, the Kyoto
Protocol became law, despite the best efforts of the fossil
fuel funded nay-sayers. They first claimed it wasn't needed,
then said it would never work and finally predicted not
enough countries would sign it into law. How wrong they
were...
In March, Xerox showed that forests are best left as homes
for endangered animals and indigenous people by promising
not to turn ancient Finnish forests into copy paper. Shame
Kimberly Clark still appears to have Kleenex stuffed in
its ears to when such common sense moves are suggested.
Cleaning up
April brought more good news. Sony
Ericsson announced a commitment to phase out toxic chemicals
in its products after pressure from our cyberactivists.
Later in the year other large electronic companies like
LG and Motorola followed suit in our campaign to pull
the plug on dirty electronics.
Also after four years of legal wrangling
the French courts agreed with us and declared the La Hague
nuclear reprocessing plant an illegal nuclear waste dump.
In the same month a huge leak at the UK nuclear reprocessing
plant in Sellafield was discovered, a mere nine moths
after it started! Homer Simpson would be truly proud of
such a level of nuclear ineptitude.
Whales in Danger
Whale meat tins from Tesco's Japanese
stores
Japan chose April to announce it is doubling the amount
of whales it kills each year, allegedly for 'science'.
Not content with only killing more minke whales, it announced
plans to kill endangered humpback and fin whales. Imagine
China researching giant pandas with rifles or Uganda chopping
up mountain gorilla's to discover what they eat. That's
why we are out now in the stormy seas of the Southern
Ocean to stop the hunt.
May started with the sad news of the
passing of Bob Hunter, who perhaps more than anyone was
the inventor of Greenpeace in the early 70's. During that
period his madcap creativity, strategic smarts, and hard-nosed
journalistic sense of story would indelibly mark our brand
of action. From the pack ice of Newfoundland, where he
dyed the whitecoats of harp seal pups to make them commercially
worthless, to the Pacific Ocean where he stood between
Russian harpoons and the whales, he inspired a new kind
of personal environmental activism.
A crowd gathers to watch the world's
first Virtual March on the eve of the 57th International
Whaling Commission meeting.
One of the first campaigns Bob was part of was the campaign
against whaling. Even now we need to defend the whales,
and not just from the Japanese. That's where our whale
embassy in Korea comes in. We were taking action in May
to head off moves within Korea to follow Japan and reopen
commercial whaling.
In June 55,000 people joined us on
a virtual march against the slaughter of whales at the
annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission.
This strong show of public opinion helped prevent Japanese
moves to reopen the commercial slaughter, for now.
Foot in mouth
Sometimes you just have to wait for
your enemies to make a fool of themselves in public. Thousands
of scientists are calling for a ban on destructive bottom
trawling. But a New Zealand fisheries boss knew better
when he claimed bottom trawling nets never touched the
sea floor and Greenpeace claims were "unsubstantiated
claptrap". A few days later we took shots of bottom
trawling nets without many fish, but plenty of rare corals
smashed off the sea bottom. That claptrap was *substantiated,*
mister.
In July, the European Union moved
to ban certain toxic chemicals from children's toys, only
seven years after we first highlighted the problem. But
the battle for wider controls on toxic chemicals in Europe
rages on.
Several large book publishers joined
our campaign to make ancient forest friendly books helping
to ensure some editions of books like Harry Potter, which
features fictional enchanted forests, doesn't mean pulping
real life endangered forests.
This year was also the 20th anniversary
of the bombing for the Rainbow Warrior by the French Secret
Service, murdering the photographer Fernando Pereira.
Silly fig leaves
The Earth is flat, pigs were invented by Monsanto, and
genetically modified organisms are safe. Right.
In some countries August is known as the silly season
for news. Step up Monsanto (once again) for their patent
claim on that well-known Monsanto invention, the pig.
Not content with attempting to control the food chain
it now seems to be branching out into trying to control
animal breeding as well.
In the news was the US - Australian
climate pact that was really nothing more than a tiny
fig leaf that completely fails to cover their enormous
inadequacies on tackling global warming.
September was dominated by the strongest
hurricane season on record, which wreaked havoc in the
Caribbean, Southern US and Central America.
Pandering to profit
In October, European politicians played
along to the tune of big business and ignored their own
environmental advice by failing to ban global warming
gases. Given some politicians are so friendly with dirty
industry we offered to move them to new jobs with their
best friends.
Flying jaguars prevail
November saw many Argentine celebrities
enter stage right to add their voice to our campaign against
the bulldozing of pristine forests. Along with a helping
hand from a certain famous former footballer the jaguars
prevailed ensure a huge area of forest in Northern Argentina
is not turned in to soya farms.
The British Prime Minister gets a
message from Greenpeace: no nukes.
In the UK in December we gate crashed Tony Blair carefully
crafted announcement of his rubber-stamping of nuclear
power as the answer to global warming. Although Tony has
already made up his mind he's having an 'energy review'
to make sure he is proved right. Even if he is completely
wrong. Sounds just a bit like the run up the Iraq war
all over again.
While scientists announced 2005 was
the warmest year in the Northen Hemisphere since records
began, politicians were discussing tackling global warming
in a distinctly chilly Montreal, Canada.
That seems like a good point to bring
the curtain down on our 2005. A little bit of everything,
except maybe a little love interest. Maybe in 2006..... |