At the end of 1996, Greenpeace had prepared the Arctic Sunrise for the icy conditions of Antarctica.
In 1997 it became the first ship to circumnavigate James Ross Island in the Antarctic, which previously was an impossible journey until a 200m thick ice shelf connecting the island to the Antarctic continent collapsed. This was just one of the many signs of climate change which the Arctic Sunrise has helped document.
The Arctic Sunrise has returned repeatedly to the Arctic to oppose Northstar, British Petroleum's project to open up a new offshore oil frontier threatening oil spills in this vulnerable region and further contributing to global warming.
In the Southern Oceans it thwarted Japanese attempts to pursue its so-called "scientific" whaling programme and chased pirate vessels fishing illegally for Patagonian Toothfish to the largest pirate port of Mauritius.
Manoeuvring directly into the missile's path did not prevent the US from proceeding in 2000 to test its "Star Wars" missile defence system, which threatens to ignite a new nuclear arms race.
Fortunately the Arctic Sunrise survived to tell the tale and continued on to Argentina for the start of the Latin America toxics tour in 1998.

The Arctic Sunrise

Main Deck

Shelter Deck

Tank Top
We
are peacefully protesting against illegal Japanese whaling in the
waters around Antarctica when we hear a mighty crash and the ship rolls
heavily. The chief engineer David de Jong rushes to the bridge shouting
"That didn't sound like ice"!
He's right - it's neither sea ice nor
an iceberg, but the Japanese whaling factory ship Nisshin Maru, 10
times the Arctic Sunrise's weight, ramming us.
Despite risking the lives of both crews, fortunately no one is hurt.