Issued on: 13/09/2021
Jennifer Morgan said she was 'deeply worried' that the world's response would fall short at the crucial COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in October CHRISTOF STACHE AFP/File
4 min
ADVERTISING
Amsterdam (AFP)
Half a century after a small group of radicals created Greenpeace, the head of the environmental organisation warned that it still has far to go on the climate crisis before it can truly celebrate.
Created on September 15, 1971 when a boat of the same name tried to stop a US nuclear test, Greenpeace has become one of the world's best known action groups with its headline-grabbing stunts.
But the organisation's 50th anniversary is expected to be a subdued affair, Jennifer Morgan, executive director of Greenpeace International, told AFP.
"There is not a lot to celebrate right now. We are in a climate emergency," Morgan said in an interview at the group's headquarters in a modest office block on the outskirts of Amsterdam.
Morgan said she was "deeply worried" that the world's response would fall short at the crucial COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in October.
"Everything that we've done over those 50 years, we have to pull together now and deploy it into creating absolutely radical and deep change. Time is running out."
- 'Change the world' -
Greenpeace's journey began idealistically, if unsuccessfully, with that first sailing from the Canadian port of Vancouver. The bid by the boat "Greenpeace" to halt a nuclear test off the Alaskan coast was cut short when the police intervened.
Since then, the organisation achievements include helping to stop commercial whaling, targeting fossil fuel companies, working to stop toxic dumping and protecting Antarctica, Morgan said.
'I think over 50 years Greenpeace has achieved really miraculous things,' said Jennifer Morgan
John THYS AFP
Surrounded by memorabilia from Greenpeace's history including colourful campaign posters and a ship's door kicked in by Russian officials in 2013, Morgan says the organisation's core principles remain the same today.
"Greenpeace started as an idea that individuals could change the world with an idea and a bit of hope," said Morgan, who took the helm of the group in 2016.
"I think over 50 years Greenpeace has achieved really miraculous things."
There has also been tragedy among the triumphs.
In 1985, the French secret service bombed Greenpeace's flagship vessel the "Rainbow Warrior" while it was docked in Auckland, New Zealand, killing Portuguese photographer Fernando Pereira.
Surrounded by memorabilia from Greenpeace's history including colourful campaign posters and a ship's door kicked in by Russian officials in 2013, Morgan says the organisation's core principles remain the same today.
"Greenpeace started as an idea that individuals could change the world with an idea and a bit of hope," said Morgan, who took the helm of the group in 2016.
"I think over 50 years Greenpeace has achieved really miraculous things."
There has also been tragedy among the triumphs.
In 1985, the French secret service bombed Greenpeace's flagship vessel the "Rainbow Warrior" while it was docked in Auckland, New Zealand, killing Portuguese photographer Fernando Pereira.
The first 'Rainbow Warrior' was bombed by the French secret service, but the group has continue to use the name
PORNCHAI KITTIWONGSAKUL AFP/File
Greenpeace activists "mark that date every year" and the organisation remains wary of governments, with activists in Brazil, Indonesia and China in particular facing personal risk.
- 'Tipping point' -
Greenpeace has vastly expanded since the early days and now has than 3,500 staff operating in some 55 countries - almost as big as some of the multinational firms it targets.
But Morgan insisted the group was still "radical" despite the emergence of younger rivals such as Extinction Rebellion, which has gathered huge attention with activists gluing themselves to buildings or blocking roads and bridges.
Greenpeace activists "mark that date every year" and the organisation remains wary of governments, with activists in Brazil, Indonesia and China in particular facing personal risk.
- 'Tipping point' -
Greenpeace has vastly expanded since the early days and now has than 3,500 staff operating in some 55 countries - almost as big as some of the multinational firms it targets.
But Morgan insisted the group was still "radical" despite the emergence of younger rivals such as Extinction Rebellion, which has gathered huge attention with activists gluing themselves to buildings or blocking roads and bridges.
Greenpace has often staged daring protests to highlight the urgent need for climate action
Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD AFP/File
Known in the past for its own stunts, Greenpeace is now increasingly embracing other strategies including climate-based legal action against governments and polluters.
Morgan said Greenpeace was also cooperating more with other environmental groups and with indigenous people -- things she said the group should have done more often.
It would also be involved with the COP 26 summit, a "fundamental moment for the planet" that she feared countries might not seize.
"I'm deeply worried, what I see right now is governments that are almost acting as if we're back in the 1980s" in terms of their levels of urgency on climate, she said.
She also called for the summit to be postponed if developing countries are not able to attend because of a lack of Covid-19 vaccines.
For its anniversary, Greenpeace has planned small-scale events in offices around the world on Thursday.
At a celebratory event in Germany in August, Chancellor Angela Merkel praised the group as "persistent, combative, steadfast and persuasive".
So what lies ahead for Greenpeace over the next 50 years?
"I guess the goal would be that Greenpeace doesn't exist anymore," said Morgan.
But assuming the environmental campaign will face more battles ahead, she said she hoped Greenpeace could help create a "tipping point where there was a movement into hope".
© 2021 AFP
Known in the past for its own stunts, Greenpeace is now increasingly embracing other strategies including climate-based legal action against governments and polluters.
Morgan said Greenpeace was also cooperating more with other environmental groups and with indigenous people -- things she said the group should have done more often.
It would also be involved with the COP 26 summit, a "fundamental moment for the planet" that she feared countries might not seize.
"I'm deeply worried, what I see right now is governments that are almost acting as if we're back in the 1980s" in terms of their levels of urgency on climate, she said.
She also called for the summit to be postponed if developing countries are not able to attend because of a lack of Covid-19 vaccines.
For its anniversary, Greenpeace has planned small-scale events in offices around the world on Thursday.
At a celebratory event in Germany in August, Chancellor Angela Merkel praised the group as "persistent, combative, steadfast and persuasive".
So what lies ahead for Greenpeace over the next 50 years?
"I guess the goal would be that Greenpeace doesn't exist anymore," said Morgan.
But assuming the environmental campaign will face more battles ahead, she said she hoped Greenpeace could help create a "tipping point where there was a movement into hope".
© 2021 AFP
Greenpeace: An 'insane' vision that took flight 50 years ago
Agence France-Presse
September 13, 2021
Greenpeace was founded 50 years ago around a kitchen table in Vancouver, Canada John THYS AFP/File
"Insane" -- that was teenager Barbara Stowe's reaction 50 years ago when her parents and the other founders of Greenpeace decided that they would send a boat to halt US nuclear tests.
But their conviction won over Stowe and her brother Robert, who witnessed these pathbreaking meetings in the family home in Vancouver to send a ship to Amchitka in Alaska.
"I have to say that my dad, my parents, the Bohlens, Bob Hunter, Ben Metcalfe, they were visionaries, they were empowered with the idea which is somewhat crazy that a single individual or a small group of individuals can actually effect change that can change the world," said Robert Stowe, a 66-year-old neurologist.
"For them it was partly an issue of the fact they felt they had to take a stand, regardless of whether or not it would be effective."
On September 15, 1971, a crew of 12 Canadians and Americans who had left their country after the Vietnam war, set out from Vancouver Island in an 80-foot boat called the Phyllis Cormack, which was renamed Greenpeace.
Their mission was to steam to the Aleutian island of Amchitka and protest, or even prevent, the detonation of an underground nuclear test.
Greenpeace replaced the original Rainbow Warrior after it was sunk by French spies in New Zealand in 1985 Pedro PARDO AFP
"Pacifism is a discipline, difficult to apply when you're young but the minute you use violence it's going to come back against you," she said.
When the French secret service "bombed the Rainbow Warrior to the bottom of the Auckland harbour and killed the photographer Fernando Pereira, that gave Greenpeace the biggest boost it ever had, its popularity rose enormously," she said, of the infamous July 10, 1985 operation against the Greenpeace vessel.
© 2021 AFP
Agence France-Presse
September 13, 2021
Greenpeace was founded 50 years ago around a kitchen table in Vancouver, Canada John THYS AFP/File
"Insane" -- that was teenager Barbara Stowe's reaction 50 years ago when her parents and the other founders of Greenpeace decided that they would send a boat to halt US nuclear tests.
But their conviction won over Stowe and her brother Robert, who witnessed these pathbreaking meetings in the family home in Vancouver to send a ship to Amchitka in Alaska.
"I have to say that my dad, my parents, the Bohlens, Bob Hunter, Ben Metcalfe, they were visionaries, they were empowered with the idea which is somewhat crazy that a single individual or a small group of individuals can actually effect change that can change the world," said Robert Stowe, a 66-year-old neurologist.
"For them it was partly an issue of the fact they felt they had to take a stand, regardless of whether or not it would be effective."
On September 15, 1971, a crew of 12 Canadians and Americans who had left their country after the Vietnam war, set out from Vancouver Island in an 80-foot boat called the Phyllis Cormack, which was renamed Greenpeace.
Their mission was to steam to the Aleutian island of Amchitka and protest, or even prevent, the detonation of an underground nuclear test.
Now one of the world's best-known brands, Greenpeace earned a reputation for creative and audacious stunts to get its messages across Leon NEAL AFP
The boat didn't make it to Amchitka. US president Richard Nixon delayed the test and the crew were arrested in the Aleutian port of Akutan by the US Coastguard on a technicality.
At this time Greenpeace -- now one of the best known names worldwide -- was called Don't Make a Wave but a name change was decided at a meeting to flesh out the daring and unprecedented mission to Alaska.
- 'A green peace' -
"Bill Darnell was leaving the meeting and my dad flashed the peace sign, and Bill said 'make it a green peace'," Robert Stowe said.
"Barbara and I were arguing with him at the breakfast table saying 'Come on dad, Greenpeace is no word'. He said 'No I think that's it'.
"That's how the name was formed. Initially it was two words, but when we had the buttons (badges) printed, the space between the two words was taken out."
Barbara Stowe, a 65-year-old writer, said her first reaction to the Alaska mission was "This is insane.
"And then I saw it could be done," she said.
"My father said we'll have a rock concert and again I thought it was insane. But when he got Joni Mitchell and raised 17,000 (Canadian) dollars (to rent the boat), I had to start seeing that the impossible could be done and it was really exciting seeing the energy rise."
The boat didn't make it to Amchitka. US president Richard Nixon delayed the test and the crew were arrested in the Aleutian port of Akutan by the US Coastguard on a technicality.
At this time Greenpeace -- now one of the best known names worldwide -- was called Don't Make a Wave but a name change was decided at a meeting to flesh out the daring and unprecedented mission to Alaska.
- 'A green peace' -
"Bill Darnell was leaving the meeting and my dad flashed the peace sign, and Bill said 'make it a green peace'," Robert Stowe said.
"Barbara and I were arguing with him at the breakfast table saying 'Come on dad, Greenpeace is no word'. He said 'No I think that's it'.
"That's how the name was formed. Initially it was two words, but when we had the buttons (badges) printed, the space between the two words was taken out."
Barbara Stowe, a 65-year-old writer, said her first reaction to the Alaska mission was "This is insane.
"And then I saw it could be done," she said.
"My father said we'll have a rock concert and again I thought it was insane. But when he got Joni Mitchell and raised 17,000 (Canadian) dollars (to rent the boat), I had to start seeing that the impossible could be done and it was really exciting seeing the energy rise."
Greenpeace has added warning of nuclear dangers to its long list of campaign issues ATTILA KISBENEDEK AFP
- 'Pacifism is a discipline' -
The boat was intercepted by the US Coastguard and the mission foiled but the media coverage and the "mindbomb" paid off for Greenpeace, which has now added global warming to its long list of campaign battles.
Robert Stowe said the Quaker principles and unshakeable faith that helped shape the movement had paid rich dividends.
"If you have deep conviction that something is wrong and needs to be stopped or changed, and speak from the heart, people will listen to you," he said.
"We have maintained our activism over the years although perhaps not as intensely as when we were teenagers," Stowe admitted.
"I'm really moved by the action of Greenpeace activists in countries like China or Russia, where they risk long jail sentences."
Barbara Stowe underscored the institution's underlying commitment to non-violence.
- 'Pacifism is a discipline' -
The boat was intercepted by the US Coastguard and the mission foiled but the media coverage and the "mindbomb" paid off for Greenpeace, which has now added global warming to its long list of campaign battles.
Robert Stowe said the Quaker principles and unshakeable faith that helped shape the movement had paid rich dividends.
"If you have deep conviction that something is wrong and needs to be stopped or changed, and speak from the heart, people will listen to you," he said.
"We have maintained our activism over the years although perhaps not as intensely as when we were teenagers," Stowe admitted.
"I'm really moved by the action of Greenpeace activists in countries like China or Russia, where they risk long jail sentences."
Barbara Stowe underscored the institution's underlying commitment to non-violence.
Greenpeace replaced the original Rainbow Warrior after it was sunk by French spies in New Zealand in 1985 Pedro PARDO AFP
"Pacifism is a discipline, difficult to apply when you're young but the minute you use violence it's going to come back against you," she said.
When the French secret service "bombed the Rainbow Warrior to the bottom of the Auckland harbour and killed the photographer Fernando Pereira, that gave Greenpeace the biggest boost it ever had, its popularity rose enormously," she said, of the infamous July 10, 1985 operation against the Greenpeace vessel.
© 2021 AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment