The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has officially listed the polar bear as a 'threatened' species, due to the meltdown of its sea-ice habitat caused by global warming.

The poles are indicators of the planet's health and provide early warning that we are compromising the Earth´s ability to sustain life as we know it. It is already too late to avoid profound negative changes at the poles, but we can limit the damage by establishing boundaries that stop the commercial fishing fleets and the oil and gas industries from plundering and polluting these already damaged ecosystems.

The snow covered lands and icy waters of the Arctic and the Antarctic are for many people the purest examples of true wilderness left on this planet that we share. The Arctic has been home to indigenous peoples for millennia, whilst Antarctica is home only to visiting scientists. Both polar oceans are also home to distinctive wildlife that has adapted to the extreme environmental conditions, such as the Arctic's polar bears and the Antarctic's penguins. Polar waters provide rich feeding grounds that sustain large populations of seabirds and marine mammals including the majority of the world's great whales.

While in the past both Poles have drawn the attention of those who saw the wildlife --and in particular the seals and the whales --only as rich pickings that could be exploited for immediate profit, the 21st century sees both regions under threat from industrial exploitation on a scale that was previously unimaginable.

Oil, gas and fishing interests are all encroaching on these once out-of-reach regions while simultaneously their fragile ecologies are under massive pressure from the effects of rapidly increasing climate change.

The poles are in grave danger.

Only by establishing large scale marine reserves at both poles as part of a global network, can we ensure the future of these regions and their astounding array of wildlife. 

Arctic base

Greenpeace has set up bases at both ends of the world to stop oil and gas exploration in the fragile environments of the Arctic and the Antarctic.Photo:Greenpeace/Newman

Protecting Polar Oceans

By establishing a moratorium on industrial activities in the part of the Arctic Ocean historically covered by ice, and establishing a marine reserve in the Ross Sea in Antarctica, we can ensure the future of these regions and their astounding array of wildlife.

There is a compelling body of scientific evidence which demonstrates that setting aside large areas of the ocean from industrial activities such as fishing and oil and gas extraction provides protection for valuable species and habitats, maintains important ecosystem functions and allows degraded areas to recover. This is even more important for the Polar Oceans since the Arctic and Antarctic are warming faster than the rest of the globe and so are under increased stress.

A moratorium on industrial activities in the north and a marine reserve in the south will make both Polar Oceans more resilient to the impacts of climate change and will help prevent further, catastrophic, climate change.

Solutions

Greenpeace calls upon the United Nations and governments around the world to commit to the following course of action to save the Arctic and Antarctic:

  • Establish an immediate moratorium on industrial development in the area of the Arctic Ocean that has historically been covered by sea ice year-round. This "line in the ice" is the average minimum sea ice extent averaged from 1979-2000, the period before significant sea ice loss due to climate change was recorded.
  • Create a long term solution by agreeing a permanent, equitable and overarching treaty or multi-lateral agreement that protects the Arctic Ocean environment and ecosystems and the peoples who depend on them.
  • Antarctic Treaty member states must honour their commitment to dedicate the continent to 'peace and science' and implement their obligations to establish a comprehensive and representative network of marine reserves in the Southern Ocean. To be effective this network should be of sufficient scale, covering at least 40 percent of the Southern Ocean.

The latest updates

 

Win for B.C.'s orcas!!

Blog entry by Sarah King | February 13, 2012

The countless hours spent scouring legal documents, appearing in court and enduring what must have been trying exchanges with the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) by our awesome lawyers at Ecojustice has all paid off. Read more >

Greenpeace and Palau bust pirates in Palau shark sanctuary

Blog entry by Sarah King | December 8, 2011

More action from Greenpeace's " Defending Our Pacific" tour where we're working to rid the region of destructive, illegal and inequitable tuna fisheries. Today, Palauan fisheries officials boarded and detained a Taiwanese fishing... Read more >

Nasty FADs stinking up the Esperanza

Blog entry by Sarah King and Nathanial Pelle | December 4, 2011

Greenpeace ship, Esperanza, has been patrolling the high seas of the Pacific for tuna fishing offenders and has unfortunately come across lots to be concerned about. Nathanial Pelle from our Australian office is onboard and recounts... Read more >

Back in court battling for a better world for the orcas

Blog entry by Sarah King | November 30, 2011

We’re back in court this morning along with eight other environmental groups and our awesome lawyers at Ecojustice to continue our fight for the protection of British Columbia’s killer whales. Contrary to what the Department of... Read more >

Greenpeace Releases Shocking Video of Tuna Industry’s Wasteful Fishing Practices

Feature story | November 17, 2011 at 10:00

17 November 2011 (Vancouver) – Shocking video footage captured by a tuna industry whistleblower was released by Greenpeace today. The video reveals the routine and careless slaughter of marine species, including whale sharks, rays and whales [1]. Read more >

The farmed salmon horror show- not for the faint of heart

Blog entry by Sarah King | November 3, 2011

Mass murders, mutations, poisons and disease-ridden guts sound like the makings of a perfect Halloween thriller. Unfortunately, these are the consequences of Canada’s open net-pen salmon farming industry, and it's spooking the heck out... Read more >

Greenpeace returns ocean destruction to Canadian tuna giant Clover Leaf

Feature story | October 26, 2011 at 10:00

Greenpeace activists visited Clover Leaf Seafoods’ Canadian headquarters this morning to return cases of the company’s canned tuna products and deliver a platter of simulated marine life remains, representing the wasteful fisheries the company... Read more >

Greenpeace Volunteers Spread the Word About Clover Leaf's Unsustainable Tuna

Blog entry by Natalie Caine | October 20, 2011

Across Canada, teams of Greenpeace volunteers have been setting up on sidewalks, outside of grocery stores like Loblaws, Sobeys, Metro and the like, to make sure the public knows the truth about Clover Leaf tuna before they walk... Read more >

Sharks and tuna make a delivery to Clover Leaf's B.C. office!

Blog entry by Sarah King | September 7, 2011

Two Clover Leaf Seafoods offices got a special delivery today of banners containing hundreds of signatures calling for sustainable tuna and ocean protection. The deliverers consisted of Greenpeace activists, two sharks and a yellowfin... Read more >

UK canned tuna victory...come on Canada, change your tuna!

Blog entry by Sarah King | July 28, 2011

Look out Clover Leaf, John Worst just turned into a John Win for the oceans. This week the canned tuna giant announced it will join the rest of the major UK canned tuna brands in committing to sourcing sustainable tuna. Amazing work by... Read more >

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