Find out more at http://www.greenpeac e.org.uk/solution
A short film about climate change, energy and nuclear power. If you're confused about whether we need nuclear power to stop climate change, take nine minutes of your time to watch our new film. It doesn't just explain why nuclear power can't stop climate change - it also points the way to a better, cheaper, more convenient solution.
There are still some people out there who believe that compact fluorescent bulbs are ugly, ungainly and undimmable. But going green doesn't mean sacrificing good design. We've been working with designer Jason Bruges on an installation using fully dimmable, compact fluorescent bulbs and, well, it turns out CFLs can be versatile, stylish and even beautiful.
www.greenpeace.or g.uk/seethelight
Planet Earth is under threat - will the aliens decide to save it or trash it? A film by Greenpeace starring Eddie Izzard, Jim Broadbent and Joseph McFadden
Those spiffing chaps at the World Bank have a ripping wheeze to help the Democratic Republic of Congo out of poverty - cut down the vast rainforest and sell the timber for a colossal profit. Except it doesn't quite work like that...
http://www.greenp eace.org.uk/congo
How would you feel is your home was torn down around you? Sir David Attenborough, Ewan McGregor and Andy Serkis lend their talents to this illustation of how forest communities are suffering precisely this fate as a result of illegal and destructive logging. Directed by Julien Temple.
If we are serious about tackling climate change, we can't keep expanding our aviation capacity (aircraft are the fastest growing source of CO2 emissions world wide). The proposed third runway at Heathrow will increase traffic by 70 per cent. Watch this film to find out more.
Destructive fishing practices and overfishing are among the most significant threats facing our oceans today. A single pass of bottom trawl removes up to 20% of the seafloor fauna and flora. In some areas this happens many times every year.
http://www.greenpeac e.org.uk/icount : Some of the celebrities who signed up to I Count at Glastonbury 2007 to help stop climate chaos, including The Hours, The Magic Numbers, Billy Bragg, Jo Wiley, Peaches Geldof, Modest Mouse and The Kooks. You can sign up too - follow the link above or text 'I COUNT' to 84424.
Top chef Tom Aikens talks about his conviction that all seafood should be sustainable at the London launch of Greenpeace's new sustainable seafood campaign - aimed at chefs and restaurants.
The UK is baking in the summer heat - and in London, the Motor Show has started. Greenpeace have responded by producing an 'aspirational' advertisement, taking the piss out of traditional adverts that connect flashy 4x4s to the driver's identity and status.
Greenpeace campaigners observing pair trawlers at work in the North Sea. A vast net is strung between two boats and hauled through the water for many miles. There is a very high rate of bycatch - non-commercial species caught and killed by accident. Around UK waters the biggest victims are common dolphins and other cetaceans.
Watch Greenpeace's new film about the problems facing our oceans and the positive changes that some people across the seafood industry are making to make sure that there will be fish on our plates tomorrow.
http://www.greenpeac e.org.uk/light : Woolworths are have made no commitment to remove power crazy, inefficient light bulbs from their shelves - time for them to move into the 21st Century and stock only efficient bulbs that can slash our carbon emissions.
http://www.greenpeac e.org.uk/dove : On 21 April 2008, orang-utans invaded Unilever premises in London and Merseyside, protesting about how the company is destroying rainforests to acquire its palm oil, used in Dove soap.
India is planning to build 73 new coal fired power plants in the next 10 years which will help make India the third largest climate polluter in teh world. Greenpeace activists have painted one of the regular coal carrying ships leaving Chennai on the east coast with "CUT COAL - SAVE CLIMATE".
Biogas typically refers to a gas produced by the biological breakdown of organic matter in the absence of oxygen. Comprised primarily of methane and carbon dioxide, biogas originates from biogenic material and is a type of biofuel. It's a product of the anaerobic digestion or fermentation of biodegradable materials such as manure or sewage, and can be used in CHP plants