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19.06.2026 à 12:39

Greenpeace Pictures of the Week

Greenpeace International

Texte intégral (3042 mots)

A big fan of peace, an A-list red carpet, and a robust defence of science. Here are some of our favourite images from Greenpeace work around the world this week.


To celebrate World Wind Day and mark the 100th day of Donald Trump’s war on Iran, which has seen oil prices spike and cost of living rise worldwide as a result, Greenpeace activists visited Te Uku wind farm near Raglan in New Zealand and transformed wind turbines into peace signs with the message “THIS MACHINE STOPS WARS”. Pictured is Senthil Kumar.
© Greenpeace / Echo Valley

🇳🇿 Aotearoa / New Zealand – To celebrate World Wind Day and mark the 100th day of Donald Trump’s war on Iran, which has seen oil prices spike and cost of living rise worldwide as a result, Greenpeace Aotearoa activists visited Te Uku wind farm near Raglan and transformed wind turbines into peace signs with the message “THIS MACHINE STOPS WARS”.


A group of countries and civil society representatives, hosted by Friends of Science, spoke to the press to defend science as the heart of decision-making in the UNFCCC process, and discuss how science paves the way for a future that is secure, safe, and healthy for everyone.

Speakers included:
Manjeet Dhakal (Least Developed Countries Group)
Felix Wertli (Switzerland)
Sivendra Michael (Fiji)
Sindra Sharma, PHD, Pacific Islands Climate Action Network (PICAN)
Gabriel Kapka (Sierra Leone)
© Marie Jacquemin / Greenpeace

🇩🇪 Germany – At the 2026 Bonn Climate Conference, a group of countries and civil society representatives hosted by Friends of Science spoke to the press to defend science as the heart of decision-making in the UNFCCC process, and discuss how science paves the way for a future that is secure, safe, and healthy for everyone.

Speakers included:
Manjeet Dhakal (Least Developed Countries Group)
Felix Wertli (Switzerland)
Sivendra Michael (Fiji)
Sindra Sharma, PHD, Pacific Islands Climate Action Network (PICAN)
Gabriel Kapka (Sierra Leone)


Highschool in Ourense, Galicia.
Greenpeace has used a thermal camera to record temperatures far above recommended levels in public schools in Alicante, Barcelona, Madrid, Ourense, and Seville. This illustrates the heat endured by students and school staff during Spain’s hottest days. 

The organization joins forces with other organizations in the sector to demand urgent measures for air conditioning in classrooms and schoolyards. In the face of increasingly intense and frequent heat waves, public spaces must serve as climate-controlled refuges to prevent the worst effects of climate change on the health of children, who are especially vulnerable to high temperatures.
© Greenpeace / Mar Sala

🇪🇸 Spain – Greenpeace Spain has used a thermal camera at high schools around the country to record temperatures far above recommended levels in public schools in Alicante, Barcelona, Madrid, Ourense, and Seville. This illustrates the heat endured by students and school staff during Spain’s hottest days.

Greenpeace joins forces with other organisations in the sector to demand urgent measures to cool classrooms and schoolyards. In the face of increasingly intense and frequent heat waves, public spaces must serve as climate-controlled refuges to prevent the worst effects of climate change on the health of children, who are especially vulnerable to high temperatures.


Over 1,500 Orang Asli and Orang Asal (indigenous people) from 6 different states in Peninsular Malaysia marched along the streets of Putrajaya's Persiaran Perdana to protest in front of the Ministry of Rural and Regional Development calling for the recognition of their customary land rights.
© Greenpeace / Azam Saad

🇲🇾 Malaysia – Over 1,500 Orang Asli and Orang Asal (Indigenous Peoples) from six different states in Peninsular Malaysia marched along the streets of Putrajaya’s Persiaran Perdana to protest in front of the Ministry of Rural and Regional Development calling for the recognition of their customary land rights.


Volunteers and community members gathered at Pirates Beach/ Jomo Kenyatta Beach in Mombasa, Kenya around a sand installation carrying the message "The Ocean Connects Is All" to highlight the interconnected challenges facing coastal communities across Africa and the need for ocean protection
© Greenpeace / Alfred Abuka Aluma

🇰🇪 Kenya – To mark the start of the Our Oceans conference, Greenpeace Africa volunteers and community members gathered at Pirates Beach/ Jomo Kenyatta Beach in Mombasa, Kenya, around a sand installation carrying the message ‘The Ocean Connects Us All’ to highlight the interconnected challenges facing coastal communities across Africa and the need for ocean protection


Greenpeace Netherlands activists hold banner at Allseas' ship in the Rotterdam harbour.  Greenpeace warns Allseas that deep sea mining under American legislation is a violation of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and call on the government to take action.
© Greenpeace / Marten van Dijl

🇳🇱 Netherlands – Greenpeace Netherlands activists hold a banner at an Allseas ship in the Rotterdam harbour. Greenpeace warns Allseas that deep sea mining under American legislation is a violation of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and call on the Dutch government to take action.


Actor and activist Jane Fonda on the red carpet.

Supporters, influencers, and members of the public joined Greenpeace USA to celebrate the theatrical release of its documentary GASLIT. The feature-length film followed actor and activist Jane Fonda as she traveled across the oil fields of Texas and Louisiana, visiting communities and hearing stories from those directly impacted by the petrochemical industry. Theatrical events were held in New York City, Los Angeles, Houston, TX, Washington, DC, New Orleans, LA, and Oakland, CA.
© Tim Aubry / Greenpeace

🇺🇸 USA – Actor and activist Jane Fonda on the red carpet at the the theatrical release of the Greenpeace documentary GASLIT, directed by Katie Camosy. The feature-length film follows actor and activist Jane Fonda as she traveled across the oil fields of Texas and Louisiana, visiting communities and hearing stories from those directly impacted by the petrochemical industry. Theatrical events were held in New York City, Los Angeles, Houston, TX, Washington, DC, New Orleans, LA, and Oakland, CA.


An Indigenous delegation from the Brazilian Amazon visits The Hague during their European tour. Alongside Eline Bosman (Program Director of Greenpeace Netherlands), the Indigenous leaders present the Amazon petition to Minister Jaimi van Essen (Agriculture, Fisheries, Food Security and Nature). The core message of the petition is: protect the Amazon rainforest and stand with the Indigenous peoples.
© Tengbeh Kamara / Greenpeace

🇳🇱 The Netherlands – An Indigenous delegation from the Brazilian Amazon visits The Hague during their European tour. Here the Indigenous leaders present the Amazon petition to Minister Jaimi van Essen (Agriculture, Fisheries, Food Security and Nature). The core message of the petition is: protect the Amazon rainforest and stand with the Indigenous peoples.


Tens of thousands of people took part in A Illa de Arousa in a massive demonstration against the Altri/Greenfiber mega-cellulose plant project in Palas de Rei (A Ulloa, Galicia) and the reopening of the Touro-O Pino mine under the slogan “In defense of the Ulla River and the Arousa estuary. Let’s stop Altri and the Touro-O Pino mine.” Both projects would have a massive environmental impact on the Ulla River basin, which flows into the Arousa estuary—the most productive yet also the most environmentally degraded in Galicia.
© Pedro Armestre / Greenpeace

🇪🇸 Spain – Tens of thousands of people took part in a massive demonstration against the Altri/Greenfiber mega-cellulose plant project in Palas de Rei (A Ulloa, Galicia) and the reopening of the Touro-O Pino mine under the slogan “In defense of the Ulla River and the Arousa estuary. Let’s stop Altri and the Touro-O Pino mine.” Both projects would have a massive environmental impact on the Ulla River basin, which flows into the Arousa estuary—the most productive yet also the most environmentally degraded in Galicia.


From left: Angéla Árvai ~ Project Manager. Artwork of Kai
Kanaka Maoli mural artist Kaiʻili Kaulukukui
Solomon “Uncle Sol” Kaho`ohalahala, Kanaka Maoli cultural practitioner and Indigenous Knowledge Keeper
Brittany Lehua Kamai, Kanaka Maoli Ph.D. Astrophysicist, apprentice navigator, and ocean advocate (Mana Moana Institute) 
Edwin “Ekolu” Lindsey III, Director & Co-Founder, Maui Nui Makai Network.

Kanaka Maoli artist Kaiʻili Kaulukukui, Native Hawaiian leaders, and cultural practitioners dedicate a 6,500-square-foot mural in Kapālama Kai on Oʻahu inspired by the Kumulipo, the Hawaiian genealogical creation chant. The artwork reflects Native Hawaiian relationships with the ocean and comes as Indigenous leaders across the Pacific call for greater representation in decisions about ocean protection and deep sea mining.
© Marco Garcia / Greenpeace

🌺 Hawaii – Kanaka Maoli artist Kaiʻili Kaulukukui, Native Hawaiian leaders, and cultural practitioners dedicate a 6,500-square-foot mural in Kapālama Kai on Oʻahu inspired by the Kumulipo, the Hawaiian genealogical creation chant. The artwork reflects Native Hawaiian relationships with the ocean and comes as Indigenous leaders across the Pacific call for greater representation in decisions about ocean protection and deep sea mining.

From left:
– Angéla Árvai ~ Project Manager. Artwork of Kai
– Kanaka Maoli mural artist Kaiʻili Kaulukukui
– Solomon “Uncle Sol” Kaho`ohalahala, Kanaka Maoli cultural practitioner and Indigenous Knowledge Keeper
– Edwin “Ekolu” Lindsey III, Director & Co-Founder, Maui Nui Makai Network.
– Brittany Lehua Kamai, Kanaka Maoli Ph.D. Astrophysicist, apprentice navigator, and ocean advocate (Mana Moana Institute)


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.

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18.06.2026 à 16:24

Finance stalls while mixed signals emerge on fossil fuel phase-out in Bonn climate talks

Greenpeace International

Texte intégral (685 mots)

Bonn, Germany – The Bonn Climate Change Conference has ended with important work still to be done to progress efforts to phase-out fossil fuels, protect forests and deliver progress on climate and adaptation finance.

Jasper Inventor, Deputy Programme Director, Greenpeace International said: “Stalled talks around climate finance for developing countries and a repeated deadlock on mitigation played out in Bonn again. It’s this repeated playbook that took some of the shine off the emergence of a coalition of countries supporting a transition away from fossil fuels at a time where the climate and energy crisis is set to be supercharged by the El Niño.

“Still, Bonn laid some foundations for COP31: climate finance work is on the COP31 agenda, creating a political pathway for negotiations. The negotiating text on just transition will also form a basis for further negotiations, but no conclusions were reached on mitigation, showing that while this process is still moving, it is far away from political breakthroughs.

“To bridge the 1.5°C ambition gap, governments must now sustain and strengthen international cooperation in and outside the UNFCCC. Instead of systematically trying to renegotiate 1.5°C and eliminate science from key negotiating tracks, what’s required is a fair, fast and funded just transition and an end to forest destruction by 2030.”

Shiva Gounden, Head of Pacific, Greenpeace Australia Pacific said: “An unrelenting war on climate science took place in Bonn as fossil fuel producing nations attempted to erode the 1.5°C mandate, cutting into the negotiation tracks meant to guarantee the dignified survival of the most vulnerable to climate change. But we refuse to let these rooms become detached from the Pacific’s reality, where a breached 1.5°C will drown our history and displace our heritage, as saltwater bleeds into the Vanua (land) that has sustained us for generations.”

“This crisis requires more than diplomacy; it requires Pacific courage. The COP31 Presidency must take the helm, grounded in our deeply held values of guardianship and collective survival. True leadership demands the domestic, regional and global bravery to chart a course away from fossil fuels and with moral clarity, stop every new coal, oil, and gas project in its tracks.”

Emel Türker Alpay, Climate and Energy Campaigner, Greenpeace Türkiye said: “The COP31 presidency put electrification on the global agenda, showing it understands the scale of the challenge. But an electrification vision without a fossil fuel phase-out is incomplete and global leadership must be matched by action at home. COP31 can be historic if the electrification ambition is matched by clear commitments to make it real. For Türkiye that means a commitment to no new coal power plants, a coal exit date and a just transition away from fossil fuels that leaves no worker or community behind. Türkiye has the opportunity and the responsibility to make it happen.”

An Lambrechts, Biodiversity Policy Expert, Greenpeace International said: “We lose one football field of forests every 2 seconds and we heard many parties recognise the need to act fast and support Brazil’s forest roadmap initiative. It’s now time to shift from endorsement to ownership to effectively halt forest destruction by 2030. At COP31, a group of 2030 forest target champions must make sure the roadmap doesn’t get lost as yet another document that doesn’t connect ambition with action and an international system that works for forests and people.”

ENDS

Photo and Video from the conference available to download via the Greenpeace Media Library

Contacts:
Beyza Kural, Senior Communication Expert, Greenpeace Türkiye, +90 5336 417 123, beyza.kural@greenpeace.org

Kate O’Callaghan, Communications Manager, Greenpeace Australia Pacific, +61 4062 31892 kate.ocallaghan@greenpeace.org

Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0)20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org

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18.06.2026 à 14:31

Rural women are on the front line of the climate crisis. It’s time the world acts like it

Stella Tchoukep

Texte intégral (2291 mots)

This story was originally posted by Greenpeace Africa for World Environment Day.

For millions of rural women living alongside logging concessions, industrial agriculture and mining sites across Africa, urgency is a daily reality. The extra two hours walked to reach a water source that dried up last dry season. The harvest that failed again because the rains came three weeks late, or came all at once and drowned the fields. The forest that fed and healed a family for generations, gone within a single industrial concession cycle, and with it, the seeds, medicine, income, and knowledge of how to use them. The weight of absorbing every climate shock first, hardest, and alone is left to communities while they remain legally invisible on the land they have managed for centuries.

Greenpeace Africa joined local and Indigenous communities for the Forest Cultural Show (Indigenous People's Day celebration) in Yaounde, Cameroon, to learn how they protect their environment, share their cultures, and chart sustainable solutions for the future. Together, they marked Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Greenpeace Africa documented how the communities apply ancestral knowledge and traditional practices to protect the forest and peatlands they depend on.

Women’s vulnerability is not an accident but by design 

Rural women are dealing with the consequences of decisions made by others, elsewhere. Vulnerability is manufactured through competition for natural resources in a system that extracts wealth from their forests and lands while leaving rural women with none of the benefits but all of the consequences.

When rain cycles delay, rivers run dry and harvests collapse, women and girls in rural areas who are highly dependent on local natural resources for their livelihood absorb the shock first and hardest. When logging concessions, oil and gas or mining operations move in without their consent, the forest and land they depend on disappear, taking their food, their medicine, their shelter and centuries of knowledge with them.

Solange Sanhgan, 29 years old, a leader of the Bagyeli community sits in front of her mother’s kitchen. “We were forced to move our camp twice already because of palm oil expansion. This time, we will not leave”. The Bagyeli are a group of Pygmies living in South Cameroon. As other local communities their livelihood is under threat from palm oil and rubber uncontrolled expansion.

Women, youth and Indigenous People are the key to climate action

Let us be clear: climate change is not neutral. It’s also driven by industrial emitters of fossil fuels, agribusiness and commercial deforestation. Often, these are the same actors encroaching on community territories. Those who cause the damage must stop causing it, and they must repair what they have broken. As Central African countries seek to meet global demand for fossil fuels, timber, palm oil and other raw materials through industrial logging, large-scale agriculture and oil blocks concessions, the threats to the forests, and most vulnerable people (women, youth and Indigenous People) will only increase.

Rural women practise agroecology developed over generations,  protecting soils, selecting and preserving seeds with a rigour no industrial catalogue can match. They manage forests collectively, transmit ecological knowledge across generations, and adapt their farming systems to shifting conditions with remarkable creativity. They are the primary custodians of agrobiodiversity of the seed diversity, the medicinal plant knowledge, and the food systems that rural communities depend on. This is not folklore. It is a functioning climate adaptation infrastructure, built over centuries, that operates without subsidy, recognition, and more so without legal protection.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recognises that agricultural practices incorporating indigenous and local knowledge can address the combined challenges of climate change, food security, and biodiversity conservation simultaneously. Despite being its most effective stewards, in Africa communities hold formal legal rights over less than 2% of forest land. When a concession moves in without consent, that system does not pause, it is destroyed. The women who maintain forest lands leave with nothing: no compensation, nor recognition, and a climate bill they did not create.

Farmers extract cocoa beans on a farm in Dikomi-Bafaws using a wood stick instead of a machete to improve the quality of the final product. 

As industrial agricultural techniques spread into Africa, and especially into forests of the Congo Basin, Greenpeace identifies farming alternatives that can both benefit farmers, consumers and to the protection of natural resources.
Farmers extract cocoa beans on a farm in Dikomi-Bafaws using a wood stick instead of a machete to improve the quality of the final product. As industrial agricultural techniques spread into Africa, and especially into forests of the Congo Basin, Greenpeace identifies farming alternatives that can both benefit farmers, consumers and to the protection of natural resources.
© Greenpeace / John Novis

One of the most effective climate adaptation strategies available is securing women’s access to land and recognising their rights over seeds and forest resources. Every hectare that remains outside legal community control is a hectare exposed to concession, to enclosure, to the erasure of everything communities have built, maintained and protected.

The IPCC agrees that insecure land tenure reduces adaptive capacity, while land policies that recognise customary tenure directly strengthen community resilience to climate change.

Climate finance, forecasting and adaptation tools must be delivered to the last mile

Climate finance exists, but if climate funds are flowing through banks and institutions that communities cannot access without formal land titles, then it is just a slogan. Weather forecasting tools, digital agriculture applications, green funds, real resources have been mobilised. But do they reach the women of Niabibeté, Nkoelon, or Zoulabot, Cameroon? In most cases, no.

Alerts arrive on phones they do not own, in languages they do not read, in zones without reliable internet.

Designing adaptation tools without designing their delivery to the last mile is not adaptation. It is a theatre. And rural women cannot afford theatre.

Driving change from climate awareness to climate action means four concrete things:

  • Polluters should stop polluting and start paying for loss and damage. Our governments should cease granting land, forestry and mining concessions in areas of high conservation value and where communities, women and Indigenous Peoples are claiming and exercising their ancestral land rights.
  • Decision makers must support the initiatives led by Indigenous People and local communities to ensure sustainable development, at least at the local level, by ensuring that the funding and technologies developed and made available are directly accessible to them. Today, these funds flow almost exclusively through states and large institutions. The communities who need them most are the furthest from them.
  • National laws must protect the land and forest rights of local communities and Indigenous Peoples, especially in areas targeted by large-scale investment. In Cameroon, ongoing land reform processes offer a real window. Civil society and the nation’s elected representatives must push hard to ensure these instruments protect communities.
  • Policy makers must build solutions with rural women, youth, people with disabilities and Indigenous People, not for them. This will support women’s roles as guardians of food security and biodiversity, and deliver adaptation policies designed with their knowledge at the centre, not as a footnote.

It will take more than a generation to grow back the forests retreating today. The knowledge disappearing with them needs nurturing and renewing too. Climate action cannot wait for those who have already been waiting too long.

Action must include countering threats from predatory corporations, like the world’s largest meat company JBS, that are driving deforestation and climate destruction and setting their sights on massive expansion in Africa.

Greenpeace Brazil’s activists have taken action against JBS, the world’s biggest meat company, disrupting their annual shareholder meeting at the company’s headquarters in Sao Paulo. They are protesting the company’s role in environmental destruction and climate breakdown, including deforestation in the Amazon.


Stella Tchoukep is Forest Campaigner at Greenpeace Africa, based in Cameroon.

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17.06.2026 à 16:59

Dutch government “legally bound” to act over rogue deep sea mining plans – legal analysis

Greenpeace International

Texte intégral (876 mots)

Amsterdam, Netherlands – Plans by Swiss-Dutch offshore giant Allseas to operate machinery for deep sea mining firm The Metals Company under unilateral U.S. authorisation directly violate the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), according to a groundbreaking legal opinion released today.[1] Commissioned by Greenpeace Netherlands, the analysis establishes that UNCLOS provisions bind Allseas directly, making its actions an immediate breach of international law. The opinion also concludes that the Dutch government is legally bound to intervene against a corporate violation that is no longer a future threat, but an active reality.

A landmark legal opinion by Professor André Nollkaemper of the University of Amsterdam, commissioned by Greenpeace Netherlands, notes that the binding May 2026 Contract for Development Work and Commercial Production between Allseas and The Metals Company (TMC) includes activities prohibited under international law.[2] According to Nollkaemper the threat is “no longer a hypothetical prospect but a present and advancing fact.” Consequently, the obligation on the Dutch government to intervene “is already engaged,” as the agreement binds Allseas to an operation relying entirely on a “unilateral United States route”.

Sascha Landshoff, Campaigner, Greenpeace Netherlands said: “Allseas appears entirely prepared to join forces with the Trump administration to carve up our oceans for private profit. This means illegal corporate mining operating entirely outside of international oversight. The Netherlands is bound by strict international obligations and must act accordingly. The deep sea does not belong to Trump and Allseas. It belongs to us all.”

Under UNCLOS, the international seabed is protected from unilateral exploitation, granting sole regulatory jurisdiction to the International Seabed Authority (ISA). Professor Nollkaemper’s legal evaluation outlines explicit obligations to be followed by the Dutch state. For several years, Allseas—traditionally an offshore oil and gas operator — has been quietly positioning itself as the primary technological enabler of deep sea mining. In addition to being the largest strategic shareholder and investor in TMC, the offshore giant owns and operates the world’s only functional deep sea mining vessel, retrofitted specifically to extract mineral-rich polymetallic nodules from the abyssal ocean floor.

In response to the legal assessment, Greenpeace Netherlands, alongside five major environmental organisations, has dispatched an urgent letter to the Dutch government demanding immediate regulatory intervention to prevent corporate complicity in unregulated deep sea extraction. The coalition is also demanding that the Netherlands send an unmistakable signal that our global commons cannot be plundered by officially joining the growing alliance of more than 40 nations calling for an international moratorium or precautionary pause on deep sea mining at the ISA.

A recent European Parliament’s resolution, explicitly commands EU member states to respond with appropriate measures to any attempts to bypass the ISA and take direct action against non-compliant domestic companies.[3]

The deep sea remains one of Earth’s final untouched wildernesses. Marine scientists warn that up to 90% of the species living in these extreme depths have yet to be discovered. The push for extraction comes amid stunning scientific breakthroughs, including the recent discovery that the very polymetallic nodules targeted by TMC and Allseas actually generate “dark oxygen” on the seafloor, and could be crucial to supporting unique deep sea life networks.

ENDS 

Notes:

[1] Legal opinion on the application of Article 137 UNCLOS in the Dutch legal order and the obligations of the Netherlands under Articles 137 and 139(1) UNCLOS in respect of participation of juridical persons in deep-seabed mining outside an ISA mandate

Legal analysis listed explicit obligations to be followed by the Dutch state: 

The Netherlands has a strict international obligation to take “reasonably appropriate measures” to ensure that Dutch companies, or entities under Dutch corporate control, do not participate in deep sea mining outside of established international frameworks.

The Dutch government is legally barred from recognizing, validating, or allowing the trade of any seabed minerals extracted via unilateral, non-ISA mining operations.

The State is under an obligation to implement national laws prohibiting  domestic companies operating without an ISA mandate. Crucially, Nollkaemper notes that until new legislation is ratified, the State is legally obligated to hold Allseas accountable for its conduct through existing legal means, potentially including civil courts.

[2] TMC and Allseas Sign Commercial Agreement for the First Offshore Nodule Recovery Operation

[3] Report on the role of ocean diplomacy for the competitiveness of EU fisheries and aquaculture

Contacts:

Sol Gosetti, Media Coordinator for the Stop Deep Sea Mining campaign, Greenpeace International, +34 633 029 407, sol.gosetti@greenpeace.org

Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org

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