All articles
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Greenpeace’s most read stories of 2026 so far
Our hottest reads for Earth’s hottest year.
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Sumatra Floods Send Prabowo Govt Warning to Correct Course
The devastating floods that hit Sumatra show that the climate crisis is bringing increasingly extreme weather. The second factor behind flooding is forest destruction in upstream river catchment areas.
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We’re not ‘vulnerable.’ We’re being sacrificed.
From the Philippines to Thailand, Typhoon Kalmaegi shows how the world left Global South countries exposed again
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That afternoon, the climate crisis knocked on my door
Floods that we usually only see on our phone and television screens are now happening to us.
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Indonesia’s Carbon Offset Failures Show Climate Polluters Must Pay, Can’t ‘Trade’ Away Their Responsibilities
Baku/Jakarta, 20 November 2024 – Greenpeace Indonesia pushed today for governments gathered at the UN’s annual climate talks to directly finance communities who do the real work of protecting high…
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COP 16 Decisions Reflection: How It Matters for the SEA Region and Beyond
As COP 16 concludes, it’s essential to reflect on its key decisions across critical agenda items, such as Article 8(j), the monitoring framework, biodiversity-climate synergy, marine and coastal biodiversity, Ecologically…
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Indonesia: Vote to Recover From the Climate Crisis and the Destruction of Democracy and Human Rights
A giant Pinocchio politician led a procession to the tune of a marching band along Jakarta’s main thoroughfares to highlight Indonesia’s democratic and environmental crises, one week before voting day
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Typhoon Haiyan survivors for the 2023 Climate Justice Walk
The Climate Justice Walk does not end in Tacloban. Our real destination is in people’s hearts and minds- for climate hope to take root and yield results.
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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
Despite the devastation I’ve seen, I feel great joy to be part of the climate movement. I feel the profound hope of a sustainable future, and I feel proud to speak up against the false narrative peddled by the fossil fuel industry.
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Resilience? You say it like it’s a good thing.
For many individuals and communities who have lost loved ones and livelihoods to disasters, the term “resilience” is a double-edged sword that can cut both ways. Much like “toxic positivity” in the online sphere in the age of COVID, Filipino communities at the frontlines of climate impacts have been growing weary and wary of the…









