All articles
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Renewable energy transition empowers women-owned coffee business in Indonesia
Indonesia is one of the largest coffee producers in the world but a climate-driven increase of floods has impacted the livelihood of small-scale producers. Using renewable energy to power coffee driers, small plantations like Lady Farmer Coffee have maintained the quality and taste of your morning cup.
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‘People power stopped Shell in South Africa’ — Nonhle Mbuthuma, activist protesting Shell at sea
Shell is driving climate devastation, particularly countries in the Global South that have contributed the least emissions. A perfect example is what they tried to do in the Wild Coast close to where I live
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A seed was planted in my heart to care about nature
The convenience of city life and advanced technology make it easy to forget how human beings rely on nature. And while we greedily grab resources from nature, we are leaving scratches and burns everywhere on this planet, our only home.
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I’ve lost loved ones to climate change and I want big oil companies to pay – Yeb Saño reflects on Shell protest
Our activists are occupying Shell’s vessel because we must. For our children, for the children of oil company executives. For those who have lost their lives in the Philippines, and all over the world.
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Building Ukrainian resilience: the green reconstruction of Horenka hospital
Greenpeace CEE is working together with environmental organisations and local authorities in Ukraine to rebuild the country sustainably. After 11 months of war, a hospital near Kyiv crippled by Russian shelling has been reconstructed with a heat pump and solar power system.
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‘My new home was a dream come true – then climate disaster struck’ – Virginia, activist taking on Shell at sea
I’m making sure fossil fuel companies are held responsible for the lives they’ve destroyed.
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How Greenpeace activists occupied a Shell platform heading for a major oil and gas field
Activists from climate-hit countries are taking on Shell. Here's what you need to know.
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Victorine vs Shell: ‘From Cameroon to Germany, no-one is safe from climate destruction. It’s time for polluters to pay.’
How many more people need to die or be displaced, and how much more of nature needs to be destroyed, before it's enough? Fossil fuel companies must stop drilling and start paying for the loss and damage they have caused.
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The Yanomami People are facing a humanitarian crisis in Brazil
In the last four years, the expansion of illegal mining in the Amazon has caused hundreds of deaths in the largest Indigenous Land in Brazil.
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Lützerath is a devastating example of the crimes committed by the fossil fuel industry
Fossil fuel company RWE wants to destroy the village to expand its coal mine, Garzweiler, which is already one of the biggest carbon bombs in Europe.