About Travis Nichols

Travis Nichols Travis Nichols is a Greenpeace US media officer who works primarily with the Oceans and Polar campaigns. He can be seen here drinking tea in Alaska.

Greenpeace calls for Bering Sea protection with thermal airship

Greenpeace's thermal airship, A.E. Bates, flies over Seattle, a fishing industry hub, to call attention for Bering Sea protection.

Greenpeace’s thermal airship, A.E. Bates, flies over Seattle, a fishing industry hub, to call attention for Bering Sea protection.

Greenpeace will fly its thermal airship over the Seattle area all week with a 75 foot whale-themed banner urging Washington residents to help protect the “Grand Canyons of the Sea.”

Watch news coverage of the airship’s flight, and hear from Greenpeace’s Bering Sea campaigner on just why this area is so important.

Greenpeace and Mission Blue will host an “Evening of Hope” at the Seattle Aquarium to celebrate Alaska’s Bering Sea, a unique ecosystem currently threatened by a billion dollar fishing industry. Continue reading

Medieval Tuna Reloaded or Shark Vs. Mermaid Death Squad?

We all know the conventional tuna industry is terrible.  It’s cartoon-bad, video-game-villain-evil, worse than Wario, King Hippo, Dark Link, Sub-Zero, Gannon, Mother Brain, or Bowser.  The companies that rip up our oceans for profit terrorize sea life like Clyde, Blinky, Inky, and Pinky terrorize Pac-Man, relentlessly chasing our heroes through tougher and tougher mazes until —–.

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Makers, Takers, & Why Supercharged U.S. Oil Production is a Lose Lose for America

Local population cleaning up the area of the Sote-pipeline accident near the city of Papallacta in the Andes.

“U.S. Redraws World Oil Map.”  That’s the front page of the Wall Street Journal today, trumpeting the International Energy Agency’s prediction that the U.S. will overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest producer by 2020 because of “the resurgence in oil and gas production in the United States.”

The response around the world to this bombshell has been a unanimous, “Holy shit.” Continue reading

Hurricane Sandy shows what happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic

A young polar bear wanders on ice, seen from the Greenpeace ship during an expedition to document the lowest sea ice level on record.

This week, Shell finally put its 2012 Arctic drilling season out of its misery.  After a summer of snafus and false starts, the window for drilling closed on the global oil giant–until next year when it plans to try once again to exploit Arctic ice melt for profit.

The company has been up there rolling the dice with our global future, betting against the odds that it won’t fail as miserably at Arctic execution as it has at Arctic preparation–that it won’t, for example, accidentally break the equipment it plans to use in case of a spill during a trial run.  While this may seem like a remote, snowy problem for polar bears, native     Alaskans, and environmental hand-wringers, Hurricane Sandy has shown us this week that what happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic. Continue reading

Romney Wants to Play Dodge Ball in a Hurricane

 

For the second time today, Mitt Romney dodged a question about Hurricane Sandy and climate change.

After standing by as his supporters drowned out a question about climate change with chants of “USA! USA!”, Mitt Romney was confronted again at a rally today in Virginia about his climate silence. An audience member on the rope line asked Mitt Romney “Given Hurricane Sandy, how would you address climate change as president?”

The opportunity to connect the dots was there for the second time today, but once again Romney dodged. Continue reading

The Battle for the Arctic Begins Here

More than 2 million people have joined the movement to Save the Arctic since it began earlier this year, and last night 3 million more got to see why.

On ABC Nightline – the top-rated late night program in America – correspondents Cecilia Vega and Alex Waterfield showed the stark contrasts in what they called “The Battle for the Arctic.” Continue reading

Arctic Ready, Shell’s Massive Hoax

A fake Shell Oil billboard in Houston, July 19, 2012, reads "You Can't RunYour SUV on Cute, Let's Go."

Early this morning, Greenpeace mounted a satirical billboard near Shell’s Houston headquarters featuring a family of polar bears branded with the slogan “You can’t run your SUV on cute. Let’s Go.”

We chose this ad from the over 10,000 user-generated online submissions to ArcticReady.com, a web collaboration with Yes Lab designed to heighten awareness of Shell’s plan to exploit melting sea ice to drill for oil in Alaska.  The site has been up for a month, but as the drill window has come closer users have flocked to the site, registering nearly 2 million pageviews in the past week. Continue reading

I Spill Your Milkshake, or, Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

Today, Greenpeace and a coalition of environmental groups will file a lawsuit challenging the U.S. government’s approval of Shell’s spill response plan in the Arctic.  The suit alleges that Shell’s plan has not met the minimum legal standards to ensure the safety of the Arctic in the event of a spill, and that the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement approved Shell’s plan by relying on unbelievable assumptions put forward by the company rather than on actual research.

We have good reason for this challenge, in no small part because the administration charged with overseeing Arctic safety has parroted some of Shell’s most absurd PR in defense of this summer’s proposed drilling. Continue reading

Let’s Go?

Readers, join me and fellow “identity correction” officers from the Yes Lab on a journey to a world in which Royal Dutch Shell does not pretend its plan to drill for oil in the Arctic is a happy, necessary thing. Join me on a trip to a place where Shell tells the truth, where the oil giant says that heading up to one of the last pristine places on earth to do insanely risky industrial work on what amounts to a “trust-us” safety plan is–to put it baldly–nutso.

Journey with me, friends, to Arctic Ready, a satirical website Greenpeace cooked up with Yes Lab to unapologetically speak on behalf of Shell’s Arctic Drilling id about the company’s maniacal profit grab in the Alaskan seas. Come to an imaginary land where Shell gets real and says what its collective brain trust actually thinks:

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Arctic drilling plan shakier than Keith Richards after a bender, says London insurance firm

Yesterday, an oil slick appeared between two of Shell’s rigs off the Louisiana coast, and while the international oil giant sent out a press release calling the blob an “orphan sheen,” something that it was in no way responsible for, you’ll forgive us for being more than a bit skeptical.

Why?

Because by now everyone knows there’s no such thing as safe oil drilling, especially in fragile environments like the Gulf.

If Shell can’t keep its rigs in check there (or in Nigeria), then what chance do they have in the Arctic, one of the remotest, harshest environments in the world? Not much of a chance, it turns out.

In a bit of fortuitous timing, the venerable insurance firm, Lloyd’s of London, declared yesterday that Shell’s plan to drill for Arctic oil this summer is a “unique and hard-to-manage risk” to the fragile ecosystem.

The environmental consequences of disasters in the Arctic have the potential to be worse than in other regions. The resilience of the Arctic’s ecosystems in terms of withstanding risk events is weak, and political sensitivity to a disaster is high. As a result, companies operating in the Arctic face significant reputational risk.

Lloyd’s is famous for assessing singular risks, and their warning about Shell’s plans for the Arctic is a wake-up call for anyone who believes the oil company’s spin that there is such a thing as clean oil extraction.

There isn’t. How can we tell?

With Lloyd’s track record for insuring celebrity body parts, their declaration tells us that a Shell-caused disaster in the Arctic is now MORE likely than:

Head & Shoulders rep Troy Polamalu getting hazed (hair insured for 1 million)

Bruce Springsteen taking up menthols (voice is insured for 6 million)

British food critic Egon Ronay burning his tongue (taste buds insured for 400k)

Heidi Klum taking a wrong turn on the ski slopes (legs insured for 2.2 million)

Keith Richards not dying (hands insured for 1.6 million)

Troubling.

Shell is going into the Arctic this summer, and it’s just a matter of time before we see reports of another “orphan sheen” appearing, this one in the polar bear’s backyard.

The international oil giant knows it’s risking one of the last pristine places on earth in order to power global warming (What, you thought it sucking up a global commodity would affect your gas prices? Hardly), which is why it’s trying to do such risky work under cover of darkness. The last thing they want is you to know what they’re up to. Which is why Greenpeace is dedicated to taking the company on.

After Greenpeace New Zealand activists occupied one of Shell’s ships in New Zealand in February (with Lucy Lawless leading the charge), the company deployed its team of slick lawyers to keep us from further exposing their work.

But despite Shell’s attempts to suppress opposition, our campaign continues. And we need your help!

Tell Shell that an environmental disaster in the Arctic isn’t a risk worth taking.