No more bombs, no nukes, no more bullies. Here are a few of our favorite images from Greenpeace work this week. Comment below which you like best!


Greenpeace activists today unfurled a giant banner with the message “NO TO WAR” in Madrid's Puerta del Sol, one of the city's most iconic locations, to send a clear message to world leaders: war is never the solution. It is time to choose peace.
© Greenpeace / Pablo Blazquez

Spain – Greenpeace Spain activists unfurled a giant banner with the message “NO TO WAR” in Madrid’s Puerta del Sol, one of the city’s most iconic locations, to send a clear message to world leaders: war is never the solution.


In densely populated Switzerland, a reactor accident would have catastrophic consequences. Together with many helpers, Greenpeace activists will draw a circle with a red thread in a radius of 5 kilometres around the Gösgen nuclear power plant on Saturday, 7 March 2026. In doing so, they will illustrate the drastic loss of living, residential and working space following a nuclear accident – knowing full well that a reactor disaster could affect an even larger area. In the afternoon, a ceremony will be held at Munzingerplatz in Olten to commemorate a future nuclear disaster. A red kingfisher will be unveiled as a memorial. The colourful bird, native to the Swiss Plateau, symbolises the vulnerable nature that would also suffer in the event of a nuclear accident. Speakers will include former SP National Councillor Rudolf Rechsteiner and Iris Menn, Executive Director of Greenpeace Switzerland.
© Samuel Schalch / Greenpeace

Switzerland – Greenpeace Switzerland activists draw a circle with a red thread 5 kilometres around the Gösgen nuclear power plant on Saturday. In doing so, they illustrate the drastic loss of living, residential and working space following a nuclear accident – knowing that a reactor disaster could affect an even larger area.


Sinta Gebze, a Malind Indigenous community member whose story is featured in the film Pig Feast (Pesta Babi), embraces one of the participants after sharing her response and watching the film in Jayapura, Papua.
© Alif R Nouddy Korua / Greenpeace

Indonesia – Sinta Gebze, a Malind Indigenous community member whose story is featured in the film Pig Feast (Pesta Babi), embraces one of the participants after sharing her response and watching the film in Jayapura, Papua.


Women's march in Brussels.
© Greenpeace / Johanna de Tessières

Belgium – Thousands of protesters march in Brussels on International Women’s Day to demand gender equality, protesting issues like gender-based violence, wage gaps, and supporting reproductive rights.


Greenpeace France activists disrupted the arrival of official delegations at the World Nuclear Summit.
With banners proclaiming "Nuclear Power = Energy Insecurity," "Nuclear power fuels Russia's war," they disrupted the arrival of official convoys heading towards the summit to denounce its hypocrisy.
This summit attempts to normalize nuclear energy, which nevertheless suffers from numerous setbacks: prohibitively expensive, uninsurable, and generating toxic waste for eternity, nuclear power harms society, the environment, and peace.
© Amaury Cornu / Greenpeace

France – Greenpeace France activists disrupted the arrival of official delegations at the World Nuclear Summit.


Greenpeace has been a pioneer of photo activism for more than 50 years, and remains committed to bearing witness and exposing environmental injustice through the images we capture.

To see more Greenpeace photos and videos, visit our Media Library.