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Why I helped shut down the Munmorah power station
13 activists, including myself, appeared in court today after we took part in a peaceful Greenpeace protest last year. We shut down coal loading equipment at the Munmorah coal-fired power station and painted the message “Coal Kills” on its roof, in order to highlight the fact that our atmosphere is being choked with greenhouse gases,…
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Coal industry must remember the reason for emissions trading
This morning, a long-standing assumption of mine about emissions trading was blown completely out of the water. I’d always thought the purpose of an emissions trading scheme was to get industries who are chocking our atmosphere with greenhouse gases to stop – the prospect of heavy financial penalties being the incentive for the industry to…
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Garnaut, climate change and the need for 2020 vision
It is reassuring to hear a respected economist such as Professor Garnaut emphasise the importance of committing to 2020 targets and his warning that as climate change is proceeding faster than predicted, more urgent action is needed. Having been such a devoted laggard on the issue, Australia now has the opportunity to show international leadership…
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Greenpeace position on the proposed privatisation of the NSW electricity sector
Greenpeace has a number of concerns with proposals to privatise the retail sections of the NSW electricity sector, and to lease out the generation assets. These are detailed below. In general, Greenpeace believes that elected governments must be actively engaged in the electricity sector in the coming decades to ensure that the production and consumption…
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The road ahead
An end of year message from the Greenpeace climate campaign team As the dust settles after a fractious UN climate conference in Bali, and we drift into the long, hot, summer break, it’s time to thank all of you for playing your part in turning up the heat for climate change action during 2007, and…
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What is what in the 2008 climate debate?
In last year’s federal budget, over $10 billion of taxpayers’ money was used to subsidise the fossil fuel industry. The May budget will show whether the new government is serious about climate change action. Stay tuned for how you can get involved. There are proposals to build new coal power stations in most states. Will…
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The next victim of climate change?
By Charlotte Stemmer I feel pretty sorry for whales. They have just spent winter on holiday in warm tropical waters where they sing their magical songs, attract a mate and then give birth to their young. Now they are blissfully swimming down towards the Antarctic on their long journey home, excited about the prospect of…
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Why choosing coal is like choosing betamax (what's betamax?)
I’m writing this blog on a wireless connection. The entire Bali Conference Centre is “unwired”, including meeting rooms and cafes, and it’s extremely handy. As I’m writing this, I’m remembering one of my first trips to Bali 10 years ago, and how far communications technology has come in that decade. And I’m reflecting on how…
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Newsflash: Australians want more than Kyoto
The news is out and the message is clear…Australians want Rudd to do more on the biggest issue facing our planet, and ratifying the Kyoto Protocol is not going to appease them. Commissioned by Greenpeace a poll of 1202 adults showed that Australians want our new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to take the next steps…
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Bali: Nusa Dua a go go
Some of the very surreal aspects of the Bali Climate Change conference are the setting, the cast of players and how this contrasts with the gravity of the issues that we are here to deal with. Bali is a beautiful place. And the conference is being held in one of the grandest hotels on the…