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  • Farmer in Inner Mongolia. © Qiu Bo / Greenpeace
    Press Release
    Detox

    More than 80% of shallow groundwater wells in China unfit for human use, Greenpeace reaction

    Beijing, 12 April, 2016 – Yesterday's announcement from China’s Ministry of Water Resources (MWR) that more than 80% of tested shallow groundwater wells in China are polluted and unfit for human use is another stark warning of the extent of groundwater pollution in China.

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    April 12, 2016
  • Blog
    Oceans

    China should seek inspiration from Paris to reign in our lawless ocean

    Out of sight, but thankfully not out of mind, this week global negotiators are discussing how to protect our ocean’s much-abused ecosystems. In particular, they will be discussing how to…

    Li Shuo •
    April 7, 2016
  • Publication
    Coal

    Boom and Bust 2016

    The world has too many coal-fired power plants, yet the power industry continues to build more. While the amount of electricity generated from coal has declined for two years in a row, the industry has ignored this trend and continues to build new coal-fired generating plants at a rapid pace, creating an increasingly severe capacity…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    April 6, 2016
  • Press Release
    Coal

    China begins to suspend coal-fired power plant approvals, Greenpeace response

    Beijing, 24 March, 2016 - Chinese media today reported that the country’s National Energy Administration (NEA) has ordered 13 provincial governments to suspend approvals of new coal-fired power plant projects until the end of 2017. [1] Another group of 15 provinces has been ordered to delay new construction of projects that have already been approved.…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 24, 2016
  • Factories along the Yangtze River. © Lu Guang / Greenpeace
    Press Release
    Coal

    45% of China’s coal-fired power plants in areas of ‘water over-withdrawal’, Greenpeace

    Beijing, 22 March, 2016 – 45% of coal-fired power plants in China are located in areas of ‘water over-withdrawal’, a ground-breaking Greenpeace study of the coal industry’s impact on the global water crisis shows. Every year these power plants consume quantities of water equivalent to the basic requirements of 186 million people. Moreover, 48% of…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 23, 2016
  • Publication
    Coal

    How the Coal Industry is Aggravating the Global Water Crisis

    In its Global Risks Report 2015, the World Economic Forum stated “water security is one of the most tangible and fastest-growing social, political and economic challenges faced today.”1 Out of all industrial production, the coal industry represents one of the greatest demands on fresh water resources. The entire coal supply chain, including extraction, washing, coal-fired…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 23, 2016
  • Blog
    Detox

    How coal is sucking the life out of the Kuye River Basin

    The Kuye River Basin in Northern China is already suffering from severe water stress. So why is the development of water-intensive coal power continuing to be permitted there?

    Qi Meng •
    March 22, 2016
  • Blog
    Forests

    This World Forests Day, we’re celebrating the Congo Basin Rainforest- and how China could protect it.

      It’s impossible to overstate the importance of forests to our lives and particularly the Congo Basin Rainforest. The world’s second largest rainforest spreads across six African countries and is…

    Shuxuan Chen •
    March 21, 2016
  • Press Release
    Climate Impacts, Coal

    China’s 13th Five Year Plan hints at stronger climate ambition – Greenpeace

    Beijing, 17 March 2016 - China's 13th Five Year Plan released today could indicate the world's largest carbon emitter will ramp its climate targets up within the next five years, just weeks after a recent paper also suggested that China’s emission may already have peaked.

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 17, 2016
  • Press Release
    AboutUs

    Greenpeace response to the Chinese government’s MEP press conference

    Beijing, 11 March, 2016 – In today’s Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP) press conference, Minister Chen Jining expressed an encouraging outlook and laid out a comprehensive range of targets for the MEP. Greenpeace welcomes this vision, but urges the government to strengthen supervision of policy and to further promote public participation as a key part…

    Greenpeace East Asia •
    March 11, 2016
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