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Latest Photos

Greenpeace activists block cranes at the port of one of the largest 
pulp and paper mills in the world to stop pulp exports. The APP plant 
is fed by wood from one of the world's largest peatland forests, which 
stores up to 2 gigatonnes of carbon.

Greenpeace activists block cranes at the port of one of the largest pulp and paper mills in the world to stop pulp exports. The APP plant is fed by wood from one of the world's largest peatland forests, which stores up to 2 gigatonnes of carbon.

Enlarge Image
Greenpeace activists block cranes at the port of one of the largest 
pulp and paper mills in the world to stop pulp exports. The APP plant 
is fed by wood from one of the world's largest peatland forests, which 
stores up to 2 gigatonnes of carbon.

Greenpeace activists block cranes at the port of one of the largest pulp and paper mills in the world to stop pulp exports. The APP plant is fed by wood from one of the world's largest peatland forests, which stores up to 2 gigatonnes of carbon.

Enlarge Image

Latest Videos

Activists interrupt Harper in Toronto

Kimberly-Clark's stockpile of trees from the Boreal Forest

Shocking new photos released today reveal the existence of a massive stockpile of old-growth logs that are destined to become disposable products like Kleenex tissue and Cottonelle toilet paper for tissue giant Kimberly-Clark Corporation (K-C). The logs originate from the Ogoki Forest, the single most ecologically valuable area left in Ontario’s southern Boreal Forest and the site of growing controversy.