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Check in from COP28: where we go from here
After a busy week one at COP28, climate negotiations resume for a second week.
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Earth needs a systems change that prioritises wellbeing
We are currently facing the failure of a system based on infinite growth that puts profit before care for people and the planet. We need a systems change and to explore alternatives towards a future of a liveable planet.
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COP28 must answer the call for a fossil fuel phase out
As COP28 resumes for a second week, negotiators will be faced with answering the call for a commitment to a Fossil Fuel Phase Out in Dubai.
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Norway continues to display climate hypocrisy in trial over three new oil fields
Oslo, Norway – The trial of Greenpeace Nordic and Natur og Ungdom (Young Friends of the Earth Norway) vs. the Norwegian government finished yesterday. The organisations argue that the recent…
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How Big Agriculture is borrowing Big Oil’s playbook at COP28
If you haven’t been following food and agriculture at COP28, then you might not know that it has been dubbed as the first “Food COP."
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Norway’s greenlight for Deep Sea Mining in the Arctic shatters international credibility
"By opening up for deep sea mining, Norway has lost all credibility as a responsible ocean nation and signatory of the UN Ocean Treaty”
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Greenpeace Volunteers: A collective force shaping a vision of a greener and fairer world
Volunteers are at the heart of Greenpeace, united in their passion to take action for people and the planet. Here are some of their stories.
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‘Getting away with murder?’: European Oil and Gas majors’ 2022 emissions alone could cause at least 360,000 temperature-related premature deaths before 2100
An estimated 360,000 people could die prematurely before the end of the century because of global heating caused by the 2022 greenhouse gas emissions of nine major European oil and gas companies alone.
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Greenpeace activists scale 140-metre crane to call out Australia’s biggest climate threat Woodside
Greenpeace Australia Pacific activists scaled a 140 metre crane and dropped a 25-metre banner calling out fossil fuel giant Woodside as Australia's greatest climate threat.
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Alternatives to Hot Air
The establishment of carbon markets under the Paris Agreement has delivered little to address the climate and biodiversity crisis. Time for risky offset gambles is over.