Difference between revisions of "Greenpeace"

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Greenpeace is an international environmental campaign group.
  
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==Anti-nuclear activities==
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In October 2013 Greenpeace dropped its legal challenge to block a £16bn nuclear plant planned for [[Hinkley Point C nuclear power station|Hinkley Point]] in Somerset in the UK. The group had lodged an application for judicial review, arguing that Hinkley should not have been approved without any concrete plans for dealing with radioactive waste. According to ''The Independent'',
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:Campaigner Emma Gibson said that the Government had since disclosed the bulk of its defence, which she admitted showed there were plans for a waste dump. Greenpeace maintains that it is "highly unlikely" the dump will ever be built. <ref> Mark Leftly, [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/greenpeace-abandons-hinkley-point-lost-cause-8906372.html
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Greenpeace abandons Hinkley Point 'lost cause'], The Independent, 27 October 2013, acc same day </ref>
  
 
==Water==
 
==Water==
Greenpeace, the environmental NGO are sponsoring a conference in Toronto, Canada on the 22nd March 2008.  Other sponsors include [[USAID]], [[UNDP]], [[FNAUP]] [[Government of Canada]],  [[Glaxosmithkline]], [[TV5]] and [[FIAT PIANIS]].<ref>ref needed</ref>
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Greenpeace, the environmental NGO, sponsored a conference in Toronto, Canada on 22 March 2008.  Other sponsors include [[USAID]], [[UNDP]], [[FNAUP]] [[Government of Canada]],  [[Glaxosmithkline]], [[TV5]] and [[FIAT PIANIS]].<ref>ref needed</ref>
  
 
==Video News Releases==
 
==Video News Releases==
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:Using a highly professional communications unit as one of its main propaganda tools, Greenpeace has pioneered the development of video news releases (VNRs) to give to the world's television stations and print media. Since many of its actions are planned and carried out in secrecy, and since many of the locations, such as incinerator chimneys or nuclear submarine bases, are inaccessible to news cameras, Greenpeace now provides its own video or stills footage of its actions, feeding them direct to the media. During the Brent Spar controversy, when media helicopters were hit by water cannon from Shell's tugs, its VNRs were greedily gobbled up by television news programmes unable or unwilling to get their own camera crews to the scene.
 
:Using a highly professional communications unit as one of its main propaganda tools, Greenpeace has pioneered the development of video news releases (VNRs) to give to the world's television stations and print media. Since many of its actions are planned and carried out in secrecy, and since many of the locations, such as incinerator chimneys or nuclear submarine bases, are inaccessible to news cameras, Greenpeace now provides its own video or stills footage of its actions, feeding them direct to the media. During the Brent Spar controversy, when media helicopters were hit by water cannon from Shell's tugs, its VNRs were greedily gobbled up by television news programmes unable or unwilling to get their own camera crews to the scene.
 
:But at last year's Edinburgh television festival, this led to accusations that Greenpeace was manipulating the media. [[Richard Sambrook]], the head of BBC television and radio news, said there were dangers that journalists, sent on stories as guests of Greenpeace, could "turn native", and added: "In some senses we were had over [[Brent Spar]]. I'm left feeling Greenpeace was pulling us by the nose through too much of the campaign." The same doubts provoked Channel 4 News to issue stricter internal guidelines on its use of VNRs, on the grounds that more and more campaigning bodies and public relations firms were using them. Greenpeace's supporters protest that media bosses are attacking them for using the same techniques that far richer and more powerful industrial and state authorities, such as the police, the armed forces or the oil in-dustry, use regularly but without any similar attacks.<ref>Severin Carrell A WHALE OF AN ORGANISATION Scotland on Sunday September 8, 1996, Sunday SECTION: Pg. 12</ref>
 
:But at last year's Edinburgh television festival, this led to accusations that Greenpeace was manipulating the media. [[Richard Sambrook]], the head of BBC television and radio news, said there were dangers that journalists, sent on stories as guests of Greenpeace, could "turn native", and added: "In some senses we were had over [[Brent Spar]]. I'm left feeling Greenpeace was pulling us by the nose through too much of the campaign." The same doubts provoked Channel 4 News to issue stricter internal guidelines on its use of VNRs, on the grounds that more and more campaigning bodies and public relations firms were using them. Greenpeace's supporters protest that media bosses are attacking them for using the same techniques that far richer and more powerful industrial and state authorities, such as the police, the armed forces or the oil in-dustry, use regularly but without any similar attacks.<ref>Severin Carrell A WHALE OF AN ORGANISATION Scotland on Sunday September 8, 1996, Sunday SECTION: Pg. 12</ref>
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==Meetings with ministers==
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According to the ''Guardian'', between 2010 and 2014 fossil fuel companies [[ConocoPhillips]], [[BP]], [[Shell]], [[Total]], [[ExxonMobil]], [[Chevron]] and trade organisation [[Oil & Gas UK]] had at least 230 meetings with ministers. This figure is a significantly higher number than meetings with renewable energy companies and their campaign groups - with Greenpeace and [[Friends of the Earth]] having just 67 meetings between them.<ref> Rob Evans, Helena Bengtsson, Damian Carrington and Emma Howard [http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/apr/28/fossil-fuel-lobby-given-far-more-access-to-uk-ministers-than-renewables-analysis?CMP=share_btn_tw Shell and BP alone eclipse renewable energy sector on access to ministers] ''Guardian'', 28 April 2015, accessed 29 April 2015.</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
[[Category:Video News Releases]]
 
[[Category:Video News Releases]]
[[Category:Water: NGO's]]
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[[Category:Water: NGOs]]

Latest revision as of 13:22, 29 April 2015

Greenpeace is an international environmental campaign group.

Anti-nuclear activities

In October 2013 Greenpeace dropped its legal challenge to block a £16bn nuclear plant planned for Hinkley Point in Somerset in the UK. The group had lodged an application for judicial review, arguing that Hinkley should not have been approved without any concrete plans for dealing with radioactive waste. According to The Independent,

Campaigner Emma Gibson said that the Government had since disclosed the bulk of its defence, which she admitted showed there were plans for a waste dump. Greenpeace maintains that it is "highly unlikely" the dump will ever be built. [1]

Water

Greenpeace, the environmental NGO, sponsored a conference in Toronto, Canada on 22 March 2008. Other sponsors include USAID, UNDP, FNAUP Government of Canada, Glaxosmithkline, TV5 and FIAT PIANIS.[2]

Video News Releases

Using a highly professional communications unit as one of its main propaganda tools, Greenpeace has pioneered the development of video news releases (VNRs) to give to the world's television stations and print media. Since many of its actions are planned and carried out in secrecy, and since many of the locations, such as incinerator chimneys or nuclear submarine bases, are inaccessible to news cameras, Greenpeace now provides its own video or stills footage of its actions, feeding them direct to the media. During the Brent Spar controversy, when media helicopters were hit by water cannon from Shell's tugs, its VNRs were greedily gobbled up by television news programmes unable or unwilling to get their own camera crews to the scene.
But at last year's Edinburgh television festival, this led to accusations that Greenpeace was manipulating the media. Richard Sambrook, the head of BBC television and radio news, said there were dangers that journalists, sent on stories as guests of Greenpeace, could "turn native", and added: "In some senses we were had over Brent Spar. I'm left feeling Greenpeace was pulling us by the nose through too much of the campaign." The same doubts provoked Channel 4 News to issue stricter internal guidelines on its use of VNRs, on the grounds that more and more campaigning bodies and public relations firms were using them. Greenpeace's supporters protest that media bosses are attacking them for using the same techniques that far richer and more powerful industrial and state authorities, such as the police, the armed forces or the oil in-dustry, use regularly but without any similar attacks.[3]

Meetings with ministers

According to the Guardian, between 2010 and 2014 fossil fuel companies ConocoPhillips, BP, Shell, Total, ExxonMobil, Chevron and trade organisation Oil & Gas UK had at least 230 meetings with ministers. This figure is a significantly higher number than meetings with renewable energy companies and their campaign groups - with Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth having just 67 meetings between them.[4]

Notes

  1. Mark Leftly, [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/greenpeace-abandons-hinkley-point-lost-cause-8906372.html Greenpeace abandons Hinkley Point 'lost cause'], The Independent, 27 October 2013, acc same day
  2. ref needed
  3. Severin Carrell A WHALE OF AN ORGANISATION Scotland on Sunday September 8, 1996, Sunday SECTION: Pg. 12
  4. Rob Evans, Helena Bengtsson, Damian Carrington and Emma Howard Shell and BP alone eclipse renewable energy sector on access to ministers Guardian, 28 April 2015, accessed 29 April 2015.