Ten years since the Paris Agreement, a sunken cake, and clean air for kids. Here are a few highlights of Greenpeace work around the world in the past seven days.


On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement, Climate Justice Action, ANV-COP21 and Greenpeace France unfurled a 300-square-meter banner on the Champ-de-Mars in Paris, denouncing 10 years of climate sabotage and showing the faces of Emmanuel Macron, Marine Le Pen, Vincent Bolloré, Patrick Pouyanné, Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump. 
These faces symbolize the different political and private forces that are torpedoing the fight against climate change. These politicians, these leaders of polluting companies and these billionaires represent a destructive system that defends the private interests and profits of a few to the detriment of the protection of populations and especially the most vulnerable in the face of the climate emergency.
© Greenpeace

🇫🇷 France – On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement, Climate Justice Action, ANV-COP21 and Greenpeace France unfurled a 300-square-meter banner on the Champ-de-Mars in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, denouncing 10 years of climate sabotage and depicting the faces of Emmanuel Macron, Marine Le Pen, Vincent Bolloré, Patrick Pouyanné, Jeff Bezos and Donald Trump.


The Greenpeace activist ship Rainbow Warrior welcomed community leaders from Pernambuco who create real, everyday solutions to confront the climate crisis and the lack of access to basic rights.
Quilombo Mundo Novo is located in the Serra da Torrada region—named after the traditional roasting of Brazil nuts in large pans. Today, the community is known for its samba de coco, an Afro-Brazilian cultural expression that blends music, poetry, and circle dance.
© Marlon Diego / Greenpeace

🇧🇷 Brazil – Leaders from Quilombo Mundo Novo Visit the Rainbow Warrior in Recife, northeastern Brazil. Quilombo Mundo Novo is located in the Serra da Torrada region—named after the traditional roasting of Brazil nuts in large pans. Today, the community is known for its samba de coco, an Afro-Brazilian cultural expression that blends music, poetry, and circle dance.


Excavators work on the Bantargebang landfill in Bekasi, West Java. Bantargebang Landfill in Bekasi, Indonesia, is often described as the largest open-dumping landfill in Southeast Asia and one of the world's biggest, serving Jakarta with massive daily waste intake and becoming a vast, populated waste mountain. As a center for government and economic activity, Jakarta has always been grappling with millions of problems. Traffic and public transportation may have become the city’s most infamous problems, but the city also grapples with other issues including jobs, waste, and now, the climate crisis. 
The local government tries to address most of those issues, but many are still left unsolved and even neglected. 
The Jakarta administration’s effort to “solve” its waste problem by dumping it in Bantargebang landfill, Bekasi, West Java, is still inadequate and largely ignored the scavengers’ contribution. Bantargebang scavengers were not recognized for their work to handle Jakarta waste problems.
© Jurnasyanto Sukarno / Greenpeace

🇮🇩 Indonesia – Excavators work on the Bantargebang landfill in Bekasi, West Java, often described as the largest open-dumping landfill in Southeast Asia and one of the world’s biggest, serving Jakarta with massive daily waste intake and becoming a vast, populated waste mountain.


Greenpeace Croatia partnered with satirical activist Dario Juričan and held a performance protest in front of the fossil company Ina on the 5-year anniversary since its gas platform Ivana D sank to the bottom of the Adriatic Sea. Activists prepared a cake with a model of a sunken platform on it as a present to congratulate the company and went inside for the handover but the cake was not accepted.
© Tomislav Huha / Greenpeace

🇭🇷 Croatia – Greenpeace Croatia partnered with satirical activist Dario Juričan and held a performance protest in front of the fossil company Ina, on the 5-year anniversary since its gas platform Ivana D sank to the bottom of the Adriatic Sea. Activists prepared a cake with a model of a sunken platform on it as a present to congratulate the company. The company sadly declined to accept the cake.


Gerakan Buruh Bersama Rakyat (Gebrak) participated in the commemoration of Human Rights Day 2025 in Jakarta. Greenpeace, along with a civil society coalition, urged the government to immediately declare a National Disaster Status for the crisis in Sumatra, halt all extractive projects that damage the environment, and undertake comprehensive reform of the police force to end impunity and the criminalization of civilians.
© Dhemas Reviyanto / Greenpeace

🇮🇩 Indonesia – Gerakan Buruh Bersama Rakyat (Gebrak) participates in the commemoration of Human Rights Day 2025, December 10th, in Jakarta. Greenpeace, along with a civil society coalition, urged the government to immediately declare a National Disaster Status for the crisis in Sumatra, halt all extractive projects that damage the environment, and undertake comprehensive reform of the police force to end impunity and the criminalisation of civilians.


Activists from Fossil Free London, Greenpeace Philippines, Greenpeace UK, Uplift and members of the Filipino diaspora held a protest in support of climate survivors of Super Typhoon Odette (Rai) who have filed a civil case in a United Kingdom court (referred to as The Odette Case), taking a decisive step to hold oil giant Shell accountable for the deaths, injuries, and destruction left by the climate-fuelled storm, which hit the Philippines back in December 2021.
© Fossil Free London / Angela Christofilou

🇬🇧 U.K. – Activists from Fossil Free London, Greenpeace Philippines, Greenpeace UK, Uplift and members of the Filipino diaspora held a protest in support of climate survivors of Super Typhoon Odette (Rai) who have filed a civil case in a United Kingdom court (referred to as The Odette Case), taking a decisive step to hold oil giant Shell accountable for the deaths, injuries, and destruction left by the climate-fuelled storm, which hit the Philippines back in December 2021.


Kids play on the playground at Marunda Flats Cluster A building in Marunda, North Jakarta. As a center for government and economic activity, Jakarta has always been grappling with millions of problems. Traffic and public transportation may have become the city’s most infamous problems, but the city also grapples with other issues including jobs, waste, and now, the climate crisis. 
The local government tries to address most of those issues, but many are still left unsolved and even neglected. 
Outskirts area like Marunda, North Jakarta, have been left to their own devices to tackle their problems such as unemployment, housing, and air pollution due to coal dust from the nearby stockpile. Residents of Marunda Flats demanded the Jakarta government to provide an alternative and clean energy source, in which they have long been the victims of air pollution from the nearby coal-fired power plants.
© Jurnasyanto Sukarno / Greenpeace

🇮🇩 Indonesia- Kids play on the playground at Marunda Flats Cluster A building in Marunda, North Jakarta. Residents of Marunda Flats are demanding the Jakarta government to provide an alternative and clean energy source, in which they have long been the victims of air pollution from the nearby coal-fired power plants and coal stockpiles.


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