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The Cold Edge – Visualizing polar climate impacts

The Dragon - Dave Walsh - davewalshphoto.com

On board the Greenpeace boat Esperanza  at Svalbard for a story on scientists monitoring ocean acidification in 2010, I met Dave Walsh from Ireland, who was on board as Greenpeace press officer. Since then I have discovered his work as a photographer in his own right. These photos are art and appeals for environmental and climate action at the same time. Ice blog followers will enjoy his polar photos, spectacular and somehow moving. “While the frozen regions of our planet have the power to ignite imaginations, for most of the seven billion people on Earth, the Arctic and Antarctic remain abstract and unreachable”, says Dave. “ I’ve been lucky enough to voyage north and south by ship, to experience the serenity of the oceans and polar regions – and realise how finite ourplanet is.”

“The Cold Edge” exhibition of Dave’s pictures opens at The Copper House Gallery in Dublin this evening. I wish I could be there. In the meantime, those of us who can’t be there in person can share some inspiration and (aesthetic) food for thought online. The British newspaper the Guardian also features the pictures.

 

 

Date

September 13, 2012 | 8:52 am

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Greenpeace protest against drilling as Arctic ice reaches record low

A team of Greenpeace activists attach themselves to the anchor chain of the Anna Akhmatova, a Gazprom passenger vessel. The team is preventing the ship from lifting anchor and sailing to the Prirazlomnaya oil platform to complete the work that will allow them to begin drilling in this fragile region. Photo by Denis Sinyakov / Greenpeace

Well, it has finally happened as feared. The National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado has confirmed the summer sea ice in the Arctic has melted even further than in the record year 2007 – and it’s not at its annual summer minimum yet. It’s likely to melt more in the next three weeks. Must be a very frustrating feeling for the Greenpeace activists who have been hovering around the Russian Arctic drilling platform Prirazlomnaya, belonging to Gazprom, for the last five days.

Date

August 29, 2012 | 9:30 am

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Greenpeace on the streets to save Arctic


 

Greenpeace Volunteer Lukas

Greenpeace Volunteer Lukas talking to me in Bonn

Interest in the Greenpeace Arctic info stand

Interest in the Greenpeace Arctic info stand

Greenpeace have launched a “Save the Arctic” campaign to stop oil drilling in the Arctic.

Putting the finishing touches to the Arctic oil rig in Bonn

Putting the finishing touches to the Arctic oil rig in Bonn

Activists have been out on the streets around the globe today – including in Bonn! I dropped by to see what was going on and record some interviews for Living Planet, our radio magazine. It was great to see the Arctic featuring in Bad Godesberg centre on a sunny morning with the shoppers out and about. I talked to Ulrike and Lukas, two different generations, both out to tell people about the dangers of oil drilling in the pristine Arctic environment. Lukas is 20 and really into environment protection. Tune in this coming Thursday evening to hear Lukas and Ulrike talk about their work. They – and all the other Greenpeace volunteers out around the planet – are collecting signatures for a petition to protect the Arctic. The signatures will be put together into a sealed container and deposited near the North Pole – where the Russian submarine put a flag a few years ago.

Polar bear in Bonn? Nice poster, Greenpeace!

Polar bear in Bonn? Nice poster, Greenpeace!

The Arctic doesn’t belong to one country, is the message – we need to protect it for all of us. Good work guys, thanks for spending your free time doing this and I hope you got lots more attention at your stand!

More Arctic stories:

China’s Arctic Ambitions spark concern

Energy giants cooperate for Arctic resources

Scientists raise Greenland climate threat

Greenpeace helps scientists research Arctic ocean

 

 

Date

June 23, 2012 | 2:36 pm

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Sea ice still on the decline

September is the month when the Arctic ice reaches its lowest extent before the onset of winter. And it probably won’t surprise you to know that the trend has not changed. The minimum ice extent was the second lowest in satellite records after the low of 2007, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Centre, continuing what’s knows as the “decadal trend of rapidly decreasing summer sea ice”.  NSIDC says this is  a preliminary announcement and the sad 2007 record may yet be beaten, as conditions will still change until early October.

There is a Greenpeace  expedition on board the Arctic Sunrise currently up in the Arctic,  led by campaigner Frida Bengtsson. Let me quote you her response to the latest figures:

Date

September 23, 2011 | 1:51 pm

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Greenpeace boss risks jail to stop Arctic drilling

 

You can’t get much higher-profile than this. The International Executive Director of Greenpeace, Kumi Naidoo, has scaled the controversial Arctic oil rig currently 120 km off the coast of Greenland. He is breaching a court injunction against his organisation imposed by a Dutch court a week ago at the request of Cairn Energy, the company operating the oil platform. The court order, sought by the company a week ago after 20 Greenpeace activists were arrested for stopping the rig operating, means a 50,000 Euros a day fine and the risk of jail for the Greenpeace chief.

Date

June 17, 2011 | 1:02 pm

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