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    Greenpeace Global Review 2021: 50-Year Green Initiatives for Better Future

    Pandemic and uncertainty have swept the world throughout the year 2021, yet Greenpeace has spared no seconds holding back its move in adverse conditions. Experience of this turbulent year shows…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    December 29, 2021
  • Greenpeace Campaigner, Hall Sion Chan, is putting up a banner written "Waste No More, Adequate Housing Now" in front of a few storey high waste mountain at Ha Tsuen, Hong Kong, urging the Government to seriously review the brownfield planning policy. © Greenpeace / Harry Long
    Live Sustainably
    Consumption Detox

    Shocking field investigation findings: messy brownfields scattered with high mountains of waste

    Electronic waste is an elephant in the room – it occupies lands, its heavy metal pollutes the environment and loads the landfills. Though countless problems have been revealed and feature media coverage are seen from time to time, the issue persists. Why is it so? Could we do anything about it? Greenpeace decided there were…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    September 30, 2021
  • Uncategorized
    Detox

    Greenpeace report troubleshoots China’s electric vehicles boom, highlights critical supply risks for lithium-ion batteries

    Beijing, 30 October 2020 — Lithium-ion batteries decommissioned from electric vehicles (EVs)and repurposed for energy storage can meet the entire world’s energy storage needs as earlyas 2030 — when repurposed…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    October 30, 2020
  • The issues we work on
    Oceans Detox Renewable Energy

    Greenpeace in Asia: Action in motion

    Coronavirus is spreading across the world, affecting our lives. People around the world are doing whatever it takes to help curb the pandemic. This is precisely the kind of action…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    April 27, 2020
  • Live Sustainably
    Plastic Detox

    Hike for Health, Leave No Trace – Greenpeace & hikers clean up Tai Mo Shan together

    Hiking has become the weekend ritual for a lot of Hong Kongers since the coronavirus pandemic turned our daily lives to mostly home-based. Despite being a precious breathing space for…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 26, 2020
  • Shenuha's Wastewater in Inner Mongolia. © Qiu Bo / Greenpeace
    Live Sustainably
    Detox

    With poor oversight, China’s industrial parks no match for illegal wastewater dumping

    Beijing, 21 May 2019 - With rampant illegal dumping, 18 out of 20 state-investigated Chinese provinces suffer from a severe lack of oversight in the industrial parks that were set up to tighten up wastewater management, which undercuts nationwide efforts to control pollution and runoff, problems that are exacerbated by an insufficient criteria framework and…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    May 21, 2019
  • Live Sustainably
    Consumption Plastic Detox

    Data from the global plastics waste trade 2016-2018 and the offshore impact of China’s foreign waste import ban

    An analysis of import-export data from the top 21 exporters and 21 importers .

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    April 23, 2019
  • Chemical Pollution in the Yangtze River. © Lu Guang / Greenpeace
    Live Sustainably
    Detox

    Cash-strapped cities in China greenlight toxic land for development despite pollution: data

    Beijing, 23 April 2019 - Chinese cities transfer polluted land sites on quick turnarounds that imperil proper clean-up and treatment, as many municipal governments depend on transfer fees for revenue, and in all made 104.9 billion RMB ($15.6 billion USD) in revenue from the sale of land plots, many former chemical plants, that were identified…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    April 17, 2019
  • Toxics e-Waste Documentation in China. © Greenpeace / Natalie Behring
    Live Sustainably
    Detox

    China’s e-waste worth $23.8 billion by 2030

    Beijing, 22 March 2019 - The value of metals discarded as electronic waste in China will total $23.8 billion USD by 2030, a sum that can be reclaimed through recycling and "urban mining" at cheaper costs than retrieving the same amount of metals through virgin ore mining, according to new research from Greenpeace East Asia.

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 22, 2019
  • Dafeng Power Station in China. © Greenpeace / Zhiyong Fu
    Live Sustainably
    Detox

    Will Chinese tech giant Huawei dethrone Apple and other IT brands in the US?

     

    Gary Cook •
    January 10, 2018
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