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The year started with our absolute least favourite man of 2004 - President Bush. In 2003 we highlighted the import of illegal timber to the US from Brazil. So obviously that made us the real criminals. We were slapped with a lawsuit under an obscure prostitution law (whoever thought that orange jumpsuits were so fetching?) that hadn't been used since the 1800s. In response we sent a clear message about the ridiculous case, but the legal machine rolled on.
Dolphin killed by pair-trawling. Thousands of porpoises and dolphins die every year as accidental bycatch.
In February a UN Treaty banning the 12 most polluting chemicals on the planet came into force after years of hard campaigning and fighting off sleep in late night negotiating sessions. In an uncharacteristic moment, the US Pentagon issued a report declaring that climate change is a bigger threat than terrorism. What, the Pentagon agrees with us? Well not entirely - the Pentagon's only suggestion is giving it more cash for fighting the wars a warmer world will foster.
| 2004 |
| The Good: Samsung, Nokia, Sony, Puma, Wangari Maathai, Coke, Unilever, McDonald's (NZ), President Putin |
| The Bad: George Bush, John Ashcroft, Dow, Disney, Exxon, Monsanto |
| The Ugly:Mr Squid |
In May it was time to face the music, and answer those charges about daring to protest against illegal timber imports to the US. The judge threw out the case because the Bush administration tried to claim we had broken obscure laws from 1872 designed to keep brothels from tempting sailors off ships. The law was patently irrelevant, so we concluded Mr Ashcroft must have been feeling nearly as desperate as those sea-bound sailors to think he could get away with it.
Corporations taking baby steps towards being a bit more green must have been contagious during May and June. In May, after Ronald McDonald sadly had to resign from his job in protest at McDonalds' use of GE-fed chickens, McDonalds went GE free in New Zealand, and along with Coke and Unilever ditched climate-wrecking refrigeration. Samsung announced a phase out of nasty chemicals and was later joined by Nokia, Sony and Puma during our campaign against toxic chemicals in consumer products.
Unwanted bycatch, including a starfish, far outweighs the target catch of orange roughy in a deep sea trawl from international waters in the Tasman Sea. Greenpeace along with more than a thousand scientists are supporting the call for a moratorium on high seas bottom trawling, because of the vast amount of marine life that is destroyed by this fishing method.
Talking of stupid destructive technologies, one of our favourites was trying to extract oil from rocks by using a huge amount of energy to squeeze, heat and process the rock, turning dirty oil into an even more polluting fuel - shale oil. After getting millions of dollars in subsidies and still failing to make money an Australian company pulled the plug. Pity it took US$275m and four years to discover that squeezing oil out of rocks is a mugs game.
Marnee Benson, top recruiter in Greenpeace Icelandic Whales Pledge, painting a banner during her trip to Iceland aboard our ship the Esperanza.
Ford plans to crush all its electric Th!nk cars despite being offered US$1million for them. Ford is crushing this environmental solution because it succeeded in trashing the California legislation that encouraged their use.
Greenpeace activists use barrels and symbols outside Cherbourg harbour, to mark their protest of the imminent arrival of two BNFL (British Nuclear Fuels) ships, which are carrying 140kg of radioactive weapons-grade plutonium. The Pacific Pintail and the Pacific Teal left the U.S. port of Charleston, SC on September 20th.
After far too many years of putting off action, humanity took the first global step to tackle climate change when Russia finally ratified the Kyoto protocol (motivations aside) bringing it into force. It was vodka toasts all round in the Greenpeace office and raucous choruses of "From Russia with Love". At least half an hour went by before someone said "Ah but this is only the start of saving the world from climate change, now the real hard work starts". Who said environmentalists were killjoys? That's a whole 30 minutes of feeling happy with the world!
In October the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Kenyan environmentalist and human rights campaigner Wangari Maathai. "The environment is very important in the aspects of peace because when we destroy our resources and our resources become scarce, we fight over that," she said. We couldn't agree more, which is why November brought such bad news.
Bush got elected again and it's back to doom and gloom and dreading what damage will be wreaked on the planet in four more years of Bush's war-mongering, international treaty-trashing, big business rules policies. But running off to a Pacific island isn't really an option, as Bush policies will help flood many of those left unchecked anyway. Nope it's time, as our head honcho in the US said, to: "Spend some time being pissed off. Feeling shock. Mourning. Then we have to act. Our cause is just. We cannot afford to be defeated, or to be defeatist. Too much is at stake: our planet, our future and the legacy we leave to our children."So are we better off than 12 months ago? Some big companies did the right thing on pollution and protecting forests while others like Dow, Disney and Exxon most definitely didn't. Huge protected areas were created in the Amazon while forests and their inhabitants like the great apes were being wiped out faster than ever in the Congo and Indonesia. In 2004 it seemed finally that the public debate on climate change moved on from 'is it a problem?' to 'how do we tackle the problem?'.
But again the world's politicians seemed behind the eight ball when they spent two weeks in December arguing (again) about climate change rather than resolving to do something. Unfortunately most politicians don't get the idea that tackling climate change is vital for the future of the planet. As one of our campaigners wryly remarked on the BBC: "Will our lifestyles have to change? If quality of life is measured by the size of the engine of the quasi-military assault vehicle the housewife drives to the shopping mall, then yes, but if we're talking about basic comforts, transport and general services, then no."
Will 2005 be any better for the planet? Who knows, but what is for sure is that we will be out there fighting for a better world and we're sure going to need a lot of help doing it. Here's hoping......
Help the planet in 2005: