1125 results found
 

Looking for tuna in Taiwan

Blog entry by Apple Chow | January 14, 2011

The ship has already left windy and rainy Keelung and we just arrived at the second stop of the Ocean Defenders East Asia tour , Su-ao in eastern Taiwan. Suao is the second largest tuna fishery port in Taiwan. At 7am the following...

A personal history with the Rainbow Warrior

Blog entry by Chris Hay | January 11, 2011

Last week we took the office staff from Greenpeace's new office in Taipei on the 3 hour train trip to Taiwan's eastern port of Hualien. The Rainbow Warrior was there doing some last minute maintenance before the start of the Ocean...

Defending our Pacific Ocean: Rainbow Warrior arrives in Taiwan

Blog entry by Sari Tolvanen | January 3, 2011

The new year has started with a big bang for Greenpeace and the oceans over here in East Asia and the Pacific. There's a pile of coinciding historical events including the 40th anniversary of Greenpeace, the final voyage of the...

Tears for the tuna

Blog entry by Karli Thomas | December 14, 2010

A Yellowfin tuna lies on the ground in Honiara's market. The feet of a local child are seen alongside. © Greenpeace / Paul Hilton Last week's meeting of the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission ended as a sad day for the...

Fishing for Independence at the Pacific Tuna Summit

Blog entry by Duncan Williams | December 13, 2010

Fishermen using the sustainable " pole and line " fishing method to catch skipjack tuna It was a huge disappointment to see industrial fishing nations beat down small Pacific island countries today- the nations struggling to save...

Pacific Islands Pushing the Envelope on Tuna Conservation

Blog entry by Duncan Williams | December 11, 2010

Greenpeace Australia Pacific Oceans Campaigner, Duncan Williams, reports from Hawaii Right now, Honolulu is host to the annual meeting of the  Western and Central Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)  – the international body responsible...

Supermarkets Want Responsibly-Caught Tuna. Can the Pacific Provide?

Blog entry by Sari Tolvanen | December 10, 2010

Sari "Blondfin" Tolvanen, coordinator of Greenpeace's campaign to defend the Pacific Ocean. Retailers have a major role in protecting the world’s oceans - they sell the majority of the world’s caught fish to the public. One might...

"Dear Bluefin..."

Blog entry by Karli Thomas | December 9, 2010

Normally when you email someone at the Ministry of Fisheries it's an email address like     but for the submissions on the Ministry's latest proposal they've asked us to send them to   ...

Pacific Tuna Hang in the Balance with Greenpeace Pushing on the Scales

Blog entry by Phil Kline | December 8, 2010

Last week, a global team of Greenpeace campaigners arrived in Honolulu to attend the 7th annual meeting of the western Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC) meeting. The WCPFC is the international treaty body that manages the...

USA: Step Up at Tuna Summit in Honolulu!

Blog entry by Sari Tolvanen | December 8, 2010

Greenpeace activists hang a banner from Honolulu's iconic Aloha Tower the day before the Pacific Tuna Summit began, urging the Tuna Commission to save tuna. For the Pacific region and its people, no fish means no future. I am in...

What's hiding inside your tuna tin?

Blog entry by JulietteH | November 29, 2010

You know that colourful tin of tuna you drop into your supermarket basket every week? Ever wonder what’s in it? Probably not; in a matter of decades, tuna has gone from being exotic mystery to an almost generic foodstuff, as ubiquitous...

Coloured leis, pirates, and chocolate fish

Blog entry by Neha | November 25, 2010

It was great to see our campaign to save Pacific tuna get a huge boost in just a few hours last Saturday. I spent the day on our stall at the Grey Lynn Festival which was was flooded by people keen to help our campaign and excited...

Southern bluefin tuna quota - it's a crime

Blog entry by Karli | November 12, 2010

Southern bluefin tuna quota - it's a crime Exhibit A. The southern bluefin tuna. It's an incredible species, a top ocean predator, once abundant yet now precariously rare - it's listed as a critically endangered species by the...

Our man in Taiwan

Blog entry by Chris Hay | November 13, 2010

Hi. It’s Chris Hay reporting from Taiwan. I’m usually based in the New Zealand office but right now I’m working with my Greenpeace colleagues in the Taiwan office who are campaigning hard to make tuna fishing sustainable. Fishing is...

Pacific tuna need our help

Blog entry by Neha | November 11, 2010

Most people think of tuna in terms of how it tastes – whether it be raw in sushi and sashimi or from a can in a tuna sandwich or salad. But very few realise that tuna is being overfished to the point that some species have reached the ...

Rescuing our oceans, in the International Year of Biodiversity

Blog entry by Willie | November 2, 2010

Explore our new interactive map  - with videos and slideshows explaining why our oceans need Marine Reserves now. 2010 is the  International Year of Biodiversity . It is also the year when international agreements and meetings have...

Farewell, fishing?

Blog entry by Karli Thomas | November 1, 2010

It’s hard to tell if it is a simple faux pas or a grim prophetic view of what’s to come. Philippine media outlet Sun Star reported recently a new fishing vessel acquired under a joint venture between a local fishing tycoon and...

Seafood boss has fishy view on bottom trawling

Blog entry by Karli Thomas | October 27, 2010

The Seafood Industry Association's boss, Peter Bodeker is right on one thing: Good reputations are hard to earn and easy to lose. And it's for exactly that reason that the fishing industry should be appalled at the environmental...

Continued inaction is not an option at the Convention on Biological Diversity

Blog entry by Seni Nabou | October 26, 2010

Our Pacific Political Advisor Seni Nabou reports back from the first few days of meetings at the UN’s Convention for Biological Diversity (CBD), in Nagoya, Japan. As a Pacific Islander, attending these big world conferences can be...

The State of Play at the UN Biodiversity Summit

Blog entry by Natalie | October 25, 2010

The main meeting room at the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan. Hello there. I am Nathalie- an oceans policy advisor at Greenpeace, and I have the privilege of leading the Greenpeace team here at CBD COP10.

Projecting Change at Biodiversity Meeting in Japan

Blog entry by Kaoru Narisawa | October 20, 2010

In the opening ceremony of the CBD here in Nagoya, Japan, Japanese Foreign Minister Matsumoto (also chair of the conference) reminded delegates that biodiversity is the legacy we will leave our children. Greenpeace is here at CBD COP10...

Neighbourhood Support to thwart pirates

Blog entry by Karli Thomas | October 20, 2010

I’ve just returned from a technical meeting of the Pacific Tuna Commission – but, actually, I want to tell you about something that happened in 2009. This time last year, I was on the Greenpeace ship Esperanza, in the Pacific Ocean,...

The Tokyo Two: Whaling, Activism, and Human Rights

Blog entry by Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki | September 3, 2010

This will be the first blog Toru and I have written together, as up until recently our heavy bail restrictions have meant that we could not be in the same room or even talk to each other without a lawyer present. The verdict in...

The trouble with tuna

Blog entry by Willie | August 26, 2010

When you get a bit close to a subject, you get geeky. Before you know it you are scoffing at how other people could possible  not know  something, because you do. Yet of course it's true that the vast majority of the public are very...

How seafood markets can help save Antarctica's Ross Sea

Blog entry by ogago | August 5, 2010

Let your imagination take you to the Antarctic: a cold, windy and inhospitable region inhabited by some of our planet’s most unique and spectacular living creatures.  The Antarctic region’s Southern Ocean is one of the most pristine...

Talking fish and wailing whales

Blog entry by Phil | July 9, 2010

Life in the ocean is not as serene as it seems according to two news reports this week. A marine scientist at Auckland university, who has been eavesdropping on fish says he has proof that they “talk” to each other. Meanwhile, in...

Whale Fail

Blog entry by Phil | June 24, 2010

The town of Sidi R’bat on Morocco’s Atlantic coast is where the biblical Jonah is said to have been vomited up by a whale. Less than 100km from that spot, something has been going on this week that is again enough to make a whale sick...

Why Greenpeace won’t compromise on commercial whaling

Blog entry by Phil | June 22, 2010

As the International Whaling Commission (IWC)'s annual meeting begins in Morocco, there has been a flurry of media coverage over a possible 'deal' or 'compromise'. Often the details, and sometimes the central points , can get lost...

Another day, another scandal surrounding the Japanese whaling programme

Blog entry by Phil | June 21, 2010

Two years ago, Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki exposed the corrupt heart of the whaling industry in the form of an embezzlement scandal reaching from the flensing deck of the Nisshin Maru, right up the chain of command to the Institute of...

Whaling opinion: Whale Watch Kaikora Chief Operating Officer Kauahi Ngapora

Blog entry by Phil | June 18, 2010

It was interesting watching the enthusiasm of Japanese pro-whaling demonstrators outside the Tokyo court which was hearing charges against New Zealand anti-whaling campaigner Pete Bethune recently. The key theme of their protests...

Japan's sordid vote-buying on whaling exposed

Blog entry by nick | June 15, 2010

So, what's your price to sell out the whales? Some brown envelopes stuffed with cash? A nice big cheque for development aid? All-expenses paid trips to exotic locations? Or some dubious entertainment, including 'good girls'? ...

Fish jumping ship

Blog entry by Phil | May 28, 2010

The vast majority of the world’s internationally traded seafood moves by sea.  Many unfortunate fish find themselves ripped out of the ocean only to be gutted, frozen, shoveled into containers, and sent plowing across the top of it in...

We need you to help save the whales!

Blog entry by Neha | May 25, 2010

Like most people, there are times I feel helpless about saving the whales as I am not a politician, scientist or a crew member on the Greenpeace boats. But I am a voice, among many others, that can make a difference. The future of...

Whales still not saved

Blog entry by bunny | April 28, 2010

There’s been much talk of how to save the whales lately, with a lot of the debate revolving around an International Whaling Commission (IWC) proposal which would legitimise some commercial whaling and allow hunting to continue in the...

Letter to John

Blog entry by Phil | April 15, 2010

Dear John How we hate to write so we’re coming to visit. Around the country people are signing petitions and sending you mail calling on your Government to vote against any proposal which legitimises commercial whaling and allows...

Complicit or just complacent?

Blog entry by Phil | April 7, 2010

If you’ve been able to dig your way out of mountains of ( Nestle-free , naturally) Easter chocolate you may just have noticed this rather fine piece of direct action in Rotterdam. Our activists intercepted a shipment of whale meat –...

VIDEO: Whales campaign update

Blog entry by nick | March 26, 2010

Greenpeace NZ oceans campaigner Karli Thomas sums up the state of the whales campaign.

Like the good old days

Blog entry by jacko | March 25, 2010

Remember the good old days when we tried to save the whales? Well those days are back, and there's a shirt to prove it. While the whales have never been completely safe there has, at least, been a moratorium on commercial whaling...

Tokyo Two say thank you

Blog entry by nick | March 16, 2010

NZ's rep - beached as bro

Blog entry by Phil | March 11, 2010

The National-led Government is declaring its true environmental colours and green seems to be missing from the palette. Over the last few months it has revealed a pro-mining mindset , it’s looking to increase the quota on our...

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter

Blog entry by nick | February 12, 2010

Dr. Martin Luther King Junior once said “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter” After acting on this fundamental principle, Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki, now known as the Tokyo 2, currently risk...

How Independent Is The Japanese Judiciary?

Blog entry by nick | October 28, 2009

Greenpeace activists Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki, better known as the Tokyo Two, are on trial for intercepting a box of whale meat as part of an investigation into an embezzlement ring within Japan’s taxpayer-funded ‘research’ whaling...

If you want to eat fish tomorrow

Blog entry by nick | September 24, 2009

About the video Our Ocean Wonderland was created and written for Greenpeace by Steven Appleby and Pete Bishop , and was directed by Pete and designed by Steven. Steven Appleby lives, works and daydreams in London and has created,...

Back in the Pacific defending the fish

Blog entry by nick | September 1, 2009

Watch the action through the onboard web cam .

Second message to Foodtown

Blog entry by Phil | August 12, 2009

I love it when a plan comes together. Today we stepped up the pressure on Foodtown to get serious about putting in place a policy that would ensure it will only sell truly sustainable seafood. We’ve just returned from the Quay St...

VIDEO: Foodtown bottom trawling action

Blog entry by nick | August 11, 2009

The destruction continues

Blog entry by Karli | August 7, 2009

Foodtown costing us our oceans It was sad to see the Seamount Explorer leave the port of Auckland this afternoon. Police had removed our activists from the vessel as they tried to prevent it from leaving port on its destructive...

Foodtown costing us our oceans

Blog entry by nick | August 7, 2009

Today Greenpeace activists have occupied a fishing trawler in the port of Auckland to highlight that Foodtown and other supermarkets are fueling a demand for seafood caught from unsustainable fisheries using the worst of fishing...

An unprecedented alliance to combat the decline of fish stocks

Blog entry by nick | August 7, 2009

This week environmental and non-commercial fishing groups have put aside their differences and formed an unprecedented alliance to combat the decline of fish stocks and marine ecosystems in New Zealand. The groups include the NZ...

IWC 2009 - whale conservation bloc not playing its hand

Blog entry by nick | June 26, 2009

Guest blog from Sara Holden, our International whales campaign coordinator Just a few minutes before the opening of the 61st International Whaling Commission meeting, a large rat was seen scuttling through the hotel and out the door.

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