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05.06.2026 à 12:29

Greenpeace Pictures of the Week

Greenpeace International

Texte intégral (2458 mots)

An AI cake, an Arctic sponge, and a celebrity SLAPP. Here are some of our favourite images from Greenpeace work around the world this week.


As US semiconductor giant NVIDIA kicks off its GTC AI conference in Taipei, Greenpeace East Asia activists confronted CEO Jensen Huang face-to-face, demanding that the AI chip leader and its billionaire founder take responsibility for the soaring energy demands and carbon emissions across its supply chain, especially in the East Asian manufacturing hub Taiwan where most of its hardware is produced.
© Greenpeace / Chong Kok Yew

Taiwan – As US semiconductor giant NVIDIA kicks off its GTC AI conference in Taipei, Greenpeace East Asia activists confronted CEO Jensen Huang face-to-face, demanding that the AI chip leader and its billionaire founder take responsibility for the soaring energy demands and carbon emissions across its supply chain, especially in the East Asian manufacturing hub Taiwan where most of its hardware is produced.


Greenpeace activists from Bulgaria, Hungary, Croatia, and Romania, deployed a massive "TOXIC" banner beneath the chimneys of the Bobov Dol Thermal Coal Power Plant. The direct action demands an immediate, permanent restriction on the facility's operations and calls out the Bulgarian government’s irresponsible refusal to halt a chronic, rule-breaking offender.
© In Motion / Greenpeace

Bulgaria – Greenpeace activists from Bulgaria, Hungary, Croatia, and Romania, deployed a massive “TOXIC” banner beneath the chimneys of the Bobov Dol Thermal Coal Power Plant. The direct action demands an immediate, permanent restriction on the facility’s operations and calls out the Bulgarian government’s irresponsible refusal to halt a chronic, rule-breaking offender.


Ocean advocates and Pacific community leaders unite in D.C. at Upwell: A Wave of Ocean Justice to demand the U.S. government stop its plans for deep sea mining in the Pacific. Surrounded by ocean allies from across the movement, they stand in solidarity with Pacific Island communities facing the world's first proposed lease sale for deep sea minerals — slated for American Samoa. A delegation of Pacific community leaders from American Samoa, Hawaiʻi, CNMI, and Guam traveled to Washington D.C., where Greenpeace facilitated meetings with members of Congress and the media to help amplify their voices.
© Amanda Joy Meyers / Greenpeace

USA – Ocean advocates and Pacific community leaders unite in Washington D.C. at Upwell: A Wave of Ocean Justice to demand the U.S. government stop its plans for deep sea mining in the Pacific. Surrounded by ocean allies from across the movement, they stand in solidarity with Pacific Island communities facing the world’s first proposed lease sale for deep sea minerals — slated for American Samoa. A delegation of Pacific community leaders from American Samoa, Hawaiʻi, CNMI, and Guam traveled to Washington D.C., where Greenpeace facilitated meetings with members of Congress and the media to help amplify their voices.


The Arctic – Images of underwater inhabitants of the Deep Arctic, captured during the current expedition. Pictured from left to right:

  • Dumbo Octopus (Grimpoteuthis), in front of the underwater structures at Loki’s Castle hydrothermal vent field in the Norwegian Sea.
  • The stalked deep-sea sponge Stylocordyla borealis, sampled from the Schulz Bank seamount along the Arctic Mid-Ocean Ridge.
  • Purple Seastar discovered at the “Unnamed” seamount.

Press Still for film to be released by Greenpeace on 28 May 2026.

Academy Award-winning actor Javier Bardem and Children's and Family Emmy Award-nominated actress Yasmin Finney star in a new film, SLAPP Suit, that dramatises the threat of — and
© Greenpeace

U.K. – Award-winning actor Javier Bardem and Children’s and Family Emmy Award-nominated actress Yasmin Finney star in a new film, SLAPP Suit, that dramatises the threat of — and resistance to — abusive SLAPP lawsuits, released this week by Greenpeace International.

Billionaire bullies and corporate polluters use Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPP) to bury activists, journalists, whistleblowers, and non-profit organisations in legal fees, drain their time and resources, and ultimately make the cost of dissent too high. US-based fossil fuel pipeline company Energy Transfer has been waging back-to-back abusive SLAPP lawsuits against Greenpeace in the US and Greenpeace International for nearly a decade in a blatant attempt to silence free speech, erase Indigenous leadership of the Standing Rock movement, and punish solidarity with peaceful resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline. Watch the full video on YouTube


About thirty Greenpeace Spain activists unfurled a huge banner on the Barqueta Bridge in Seville bearing the slogan “Aznalcóllar: Not Again” to protest against the plan to reopen the mine.
© Pedro Armestre / Greenpeace

Spain – Thirty Greenpeace Spain activists unfurled a huge banner on the Barqueta Bridge in Seville bearing the slogan “Aznalcóllar: Not Again” to protest against the plan to reopen a coal mine.


Activists hold a banner near the US. Capitol Building in Washington DC demanding protection of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The federal government plans to open the Coastal Plain of the refuge for oil & gas drilling in a lease sale June 5, 2026.
© Tim Aubry / Greenpeace

USA – Activists hold a banner near the US. Capitol Building in Washington DC demanding protection of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The federal government plans to open the Coastal Plain of the refuge for oil & gas drilling in a lease sale June 5, 2026.


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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05.06.2026 à 05:24

500 metres through the heat: Who pays for the heatwave crisis?

Vaishali Upadhyay

Texte intégral (1830 mots)

On 15 May, while most people were resting indoors, the Sunder Nagri community of North-East Delhi, India, stepped out into the heat to map their own neighbourhood. Women, youth, young girls, and school-going children gathered around the nearest local school, covering their faces with scarves, carrying pocket fans, base maps of the community, and the enthusiasm to identify heat hotspots and natural cooling spaces within their area.

The community heat mapping exercise was not just about measuring temperature. It was about understanding how people experience heat in their everyday lives and questioning why some neighbourhoods continue to remain more vulnerable to extreme heat than others.

Community heat mapping is a participatory process where residents walk through their neighbourhoods and identify:

  • areas that feel extremely hot
  • spaces with shade and natural cooling
  • accessibility water
  • places where people can sit and rest
  • locations where heat makes movement and work difficult

Unlike technical heat maps created only through satellite data, community heat mapping helps capture people’s lived experiences of heat and understand what measures or interventions have been taken by the government or the community to cope with rising temperatures. It also documents how heat is unevenly felt across different streets, markets, public spaces, bus stops, work areas, and homes.

At 4 o’clock in the afternoon, the community began the walk by observing and marking trees, shaded areas, sitting spaces, and places where they felt unbearable, manageable, or relatively normal levels of heat. But the exercise was not limited to documenting spaces on a base map. It also became a space for conversations, discussions about why there are so few shaded public spaces where people can pause, sit, and find some relief from the heat.

Community members pointed out at that markets on the maps with almost no tree cover and most vendors depended on tarpaulin sheets for shade in Delhi, India.
© Greenpeace

As the group walked through the neighbourhood, they captured photographs and used thermal devices to record temperatures across markets, shaded spaces, parks, and streets. Although the walking route was hardly 500 metres long, it took almost 30 minutes to complete because residents carefully stopped to observe, discuss, and document different physical features, resources, and experiences along the route.

One of the young girls participating in the exercise raised an important concern. While doing the online mapping through an app, their mobile devices had started overheating and stopped functioning. She also mentioned that they were already feeling exhausted and too tired to continue walking for long.

The observation itself reflected the intensity of the heatwave. The participants had started the walk with excitement and curiosity, smiling and actively engaging with the process. But by the end of the walk, many were visibly frustrated, irritated, and drained by the heat.

However, the mapping exercise did not end there.

The entire community later assembled at “Happy Garden” – A garden maintained by women from the community. For many women, it remains one of the few accessible public spaces within the neighbourhood where they can comfortably sit and safely relax.

Inside the garden, residents collectively drew a large map of the community on a piece of cloth. They marked observations from the walk and colour-coded different spaces based on how they experienced them:

  • blue for cooling spaces
  • orange and red for heat hotspots
  • and green for tree cover and shaded areas
Community members pointed out at that markets on the maps with almost no tree cover and most vendors depended on tarpaulin sheets for shade in Delhi, India.
© Greenpeace

As the mapping continued, one of the strongest themes that emerged from the discussion was the lack of cool resting spaces and poor access to drinking water.

Residents pointed out that markets had almost no tree cover. Most vendors depended on tarpaulin sheets for shade, but instead of cooling the space, these sheets trapped heat underneath. When one of the community members checked the temperature through a thermal camera, the market area showed a temperature of nearly 51 degrees Celsius.
While collectively making the cloth map, residents discussed similarities across different neighbourhoods and reflected on who suffers the most during extreme heat. Conversations slowly moved towards larger questions around Delhi’s Heat Action Plan and its implementation on the ground.

One of the women pointed out that many announcements made by the government often remain limited to paper and fail to translate into actual relief for communities facing extreme temperatures every day. Another woman said, “They never asked what we wanted for our communities.” Residents emphasized the importance of community consultation when designing and implementing such heat action plans so that policies reflect the realities of people’s experience on the ground.

The discussion ended with larger questions around accountability and responsibility:
Who is responsible for creating heat-resilient neighbourhoods?
Who ensures access to shaded public spaces, water, cooling infrastructure, and safe resting spaces?
And most importantly, who gets to rest during intense heatwave crises?

These questions around accountability do not stop at the neighbourhood level. They also raise a larger question: Who should pay for the damages caused by climate change and environmental. Sunder Nagri is only one example where rising temperature, lack of cooling infrastructure, and damaged urban environments are directly affecting people’s daily lives, forcing communities to constantly adapt and survive conditions that are increasingly becoming unbearable. And, similar situations are unfolding across many neighbourhoods, cities, and countries. 

These environmental destruction is not accidental but damage caused by large industries, fossil fuel extraction, and profit-led development models despite knowing the long-term environmental consequences of their actions. The principle of “Polluter Pays” must be central to climate justice. Rich corporations and oil industries that have historically polluted the environment and profited from ecological destruction should be held accountable and made to pay for climate adaptation, public infrastructure, and the damages caused to communities globally.

As heatwaves continue to intensify across cities globally, community-led heat mapping exercises like this show that heat is not only a climate issue, it is also deeply connected to inequality, public infrastructure, health crises, mobility, and the right to rest with dignity.

Vaishali Upadhyay is the community campaign coordinator at Greenpeace India, based in New Delhi, India.

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04.06.2026 à 18:52

What we found in the Arctic deep sea!

Daniel Bengtsson

Texte intégral (2109 mots)

For the first time, Greenpeace has led a unique deep sea expedition to the Arctic. Together with a team of expert scientists we explored the life and wonders of the Arctic deep sea – one of Earth’s least known wildernesses, and we were astonished by what we found!

Our many hours of divestreams from the Arctic seabed have reached hundreds of thousands of viewers. Together with the scientists we have had school classes calling in to the research ship asking questions to the scientists about the deep sea, and we have filmed over 100 hours of high-resolution video of these extraordinary ecosystems that will now be shared with the world.

The scientists onboard have had a particular focus on vulnerable and undescribed species in the area – and they will analyse all material and samples in detail after the expedition, but they already think that they have discovered several potential new species to science.

Dr. Paco Cárdenas, from Uppsala University, fixing subsamples of sponges with RNAlater, formol, Gluteraldeyde or ethanol. 

Greenpeace will gather scientific evidence of the diversity, distribution and connectivity of fauna in Arctic deep-sea ecosystems in the mining area - with particular focus on vulnerable, rare, endemic and undescribed species - in order to trigger international, regional and national conservation protocols.
Dr. Jenny Neuhaus and Dr. Anne-Nina Lörz from the Senckenberg Society for Nature Research in Germany, sitting in front of the screens during the first divestream. 

Greenpeace will gather scientific evidence of the diversity, distribution and connectivity of fauna in Arctic deep-sea ecosystems in the mining area - with particular focus on vulnerable, rare, endemic and undescribed species - in order to trigger international, regional and national conservation protocols.

And even if we are of course super excited about new species, there is no doubt that the scientists also got very excited when they came across our expedition “mascot” – the dumbo octopus in real life

Having seen all the life and beauty of these ecosystems, that reminds us a lot of underwater biodiversity-rich meadows or coral reefs, makes it even more insane to start deep-sea mining in these ecosystems, which would be totally destroyed if the industry gets its way.

But the mining industry has not yet started to tear up the seabed, and we therefore have the unusual and real opportunity to stop an environmental disaster before it happens. We have stopped them before, and in Norway all exploration is halted until at least the end of 2029.

Meanwhile, Greenpeace will use the scientific evidence and new findings from the expedition to shine a light on these extraordinary ecosystems and call on leaders and policymakers to establish Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) and long-term protection of the Arctic deep sea.

It’s high time they listen to the science, and protect the deep sea!

Deep Arctic Expedition image
Deep Arctic Expedition

Join Greenpeace and world-leading scientists as we explore the fascinating deep sea in the Arctic.

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Daniel Bengtsson is the Communications Lead on the Deep Arctic Expedition with Greenpeace Nordic.

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04.06.2026 à 10:56

Raising a glass of clean water to a historic win for People over Big Ag

Christian Fromberg

Texte intégral (1951 mots)

A massive breakthrough in Denmark for people against corporate giants. The new Danish coalition government has officially committed to drastically tightening its drinking water safety standards to protect citizens from agriculture nitrate pollution. Denmark has one of the most intensive industrial farming systems in the world. In fact, there are more pigs per person there than anywhere else on Earth. Following relentless public pressure, this historic victory sends a clear message to global Big Ag: our right to clean water is not for sale.

A political promise on paper is just the beginning. To ensure this breakthrough becomes a reality and isn’t watered down by corporate lobbying, we must turn this local momentum into a global wave of action.

For decades, massive meat corporations and industrial farms have treated our shared water as their private, unregulated sewer,  leaking toxic nitrate into groundwater, local wells, and rivers. While a handful of corporate executives pocket record profits, everyday families are left to pay the environmental and health bill. The new government aims to change that, and we will keep watch until they do. 

Tethered Cows for Bärenmarke Milk in Hesse. © Greenpeace
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The hidden scale of agricultural pollution

In Greenpeace Denmark we have been working with scientists, local communities, and civil society to draw attention to this essential issue for years. Offering free nitrate testing to citizens across Denmark, allowing them to easily check the safety of their own drinking water. By doing this, we turned everyday people into citizen scientists to expose the hidden scale of agricultural pollution, and to show the big picture, we created the nitrate map of Denmark.

People took to the streets across the country, demanding clean water, and it became such a hot topic, that the recent general election was called the “Pig Election”. When politicians are met with people power, they follow our lead: most parties had committed to address the issue even before the election.

On 02 June, the new government announced what we have been waiting for for years: the lowering of the nitrate limit in line with the authorities’ recommendation, and finally protecting our drinking water from Big Ag’s toxic waste. Last year, an international expert group under the Ministry of the Environment proposed 6 mg/l as the new limit, replacing the current 50 mg/l. New research links nitrate in drinking water to increased cancer risks, preterm birth, birth defects at levels well below current regulatory limits. When the new limit is implemented, it will be a historic victory for water safety and our health as well.

Ditte Viktor was one of the citizens with her own water well who stopped by the library in Svenstrup south of Aalborg, Denmark to have her water tested for nitrate. © Greenpeace

Your address shouldn’t determine if you get clean tap water

While the Danish government’s promise is a historic breakthrough, the hardest work begins now. We cannot let this decision get stuck on political paper: ensuring that the 6 mg/L recommendation quickly becomes law, turning political promises into actual clean water in people’s homes.

Filtering these toxins on a large scale is a technical and financial nightmare. We need to address the root cause; livestock expansions that cause massive amounts of nitrate getting into our water systems.  Transitioning to ecological farming ensures a food system in balance with nature and our health.

As an EU Natura 2000 site, Denmark is legally obliged to protect the area. But Tybjerggård Breeding, owned by a holding company and one of Denmark’s largest pig producers, wants to push through a controversial expansion in Rislev and is using a known loophole in the law. The existing factory farm already has 120.000 piglets in annual production. A new factory unit of about the same size would add another 20.000 slaughter pigs.
The planned expansion has been met with strong opposition in Rislev and surroundings. In addition to the impact of nitrogen pollution on nature, the local community is plagued by odors, noise from the industrial barn's ventilation and the screams of the pigs, as well as heavy traffic of lorries carrying feed, manure and live and dead animals. Greenpeace is calling on the Danish environment minister, Magnus Heunicke, to step in and close the loophole and stop the construction of the new pig factory.

But this problem doesn’t start and stop at the Danish border. Our global, industrial food system threatens drinking water from Spain to New Zealand. So we need to take this momentum global. The health of our children and the safety of our water should never depend on where we happen to live. It is time for standing up against Big Ag’s massive meat mega-projects, demanding clean water and a just transition to ecological farming, everywhere.

It is time to choose people over profit. Together, we can break Big Ag’s grip on our political system and force a rapid, just transition to a food system that respects nature, animals, and local communities. 

Let’s stop Big Ag and put an end to their toxic greed! 

Tethered Cows for Bärenmarke Milk in Hesse. © Greenpeace
Stop Big Meat and Dairy

It’s time to cut through corporate lies, cut agriculture emissions and shift towards sustainable agroecology.

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Christian Fromberg is political campaign lead at Greenpeace Denmark. 

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