A Rough Week for University of New Hampshire President Mark Huddleston

Written by: Fiona Gettinger, Fiona is a Sophmore at the Univerisity of New Hampshire majoring in Environmental Conservation Studies, she is also a campus coordinator with the Greenpeace Student Network and the President of the Student Environmental Action Coalition.

It’s been a rough week for University of New Hampshire President Mark Huddleston, and the UNH Student Environmental Action Coalition could be to blame for that. Three months into our campaign to get our institution to divest from fossil fuel companies, we received an official statement from the administration saying that divestment isn’t a “practical or feasible option”. Two weeks ago, we decided it was time for action. So, this past week we’ve been turning up the heat, starting with this opinion piece released on Tuesday. On Thursday, forty of us marched into the President’s office to deliver over a thousand petition signatures from the student body in support of our campaign. Continue reading

Greenpeace Students Visit Rockaway to Support Victims of Sandy

Images from Greenpeace Semester student's trip to Rockaway.

I never imagined my first visit to New York would consist of filtering through the wreckage Sandy left behind at the Rockaways, but I wouldn’t trade it for anything. I have never been exposed to a natural disaster zone, although it didn’t take long for me to realize this wasn’t just a hurricane they dealt with, this was something much more. This was a Frankenstorm: a climate change monster.

My fellow Greenpeace Semester classmates, Kris Brown, Kati Ward and myself decided to drive up to New York after class on Friday November 9thto bear witness and devote our weekend with Occupy Sandy and YANA (You Are Not Alone). YANA is comprised of many locals who have quit their day jobs and instead devote their time to building back up their hometown and the people who live there as well. It’s so inspiring to watch these brave locals push through blood, sweat and tears for their community, only to go home to a house with no power that is still ruined from the storm.

A powerful image, reminding us of all the children affected by Sandy and all those, who like us, will have to grow up in a world where Frankenstorms like Sandy become the "new normal".

Kris and I walked along the fragments of the boardwalk one night, sifting through the sand dunes in the middle of the street full of personal belongings. We talked to a local lady who had weathered the storm. She stayed with her upstairs neighbor and watched as the surge flooded her street, the cars started swirling with their alarms and lights going off and prayed her son would quickly return from saving their elderly neighbor from her basement apartment.  She told me about one older man who refused to leave his apartment and ended up drowning.

I asked if she planned on staying in the Rockaways after the devastation of Sandy and she looked at me like I was crazy. She told me there was no way she would leave the Rockaways.  It has always been her home, and that’s why she stayed through the storm.

Some of the destruction caused by Hurricane Sandy that we got to see while helping out with the relief effort in Rockaway.

I found that statement to be a resounding community anthem.  It was also obvious to everyone we talked to that this storm was unlike anything they’ve experience in their lifetimes.  Everyone we talked to had no doubt that climate change created this monster. The Rockaways want to take the opportunity Sandy has given to make a switch to clean energy, which is hopeful and a promising ray of light that may shine through the wreckage and doom Sandy left in her wake. Don’t forget about the Rockaways.  They are still in need of help and without power. Remind them: you are not alone.

Interested in joining the Greenpeace Semester for amazing organizing experiences like this one? Apply today for the summer semester!

This blog was written by Ellen Enquist.  Ellen is a senior at Boise State University where she’s majoring in Environmental Studies. She is a member of our current Greenpeace Semester class.

Greenpeace ViewBug.com Photo Contest Winner

And the Winner is…….People!

ViewBug Contest winner by yesyoudid

Greenpeace USA partnered with ViewBug.com, an online photographer community, to run a photo contest around the theme of power, asking what does that look like? Power, as in what powers your life? Power as the visual form of energy – human energy, physical energy, the energy of nature, energy infrastructure, energy generation, human power, people power, water, wind, solar, living power, imaginative power, the power of life. Continue reading

Students Pressure University of North Texas President to Embrace “Green” Slogan and drop fossil fuels

Students stand for clean energy

Down in Texas, a region that is notorious for its oil and gas men, the idea of switching to 100% renewable energy isn’t exactly an idea that is catching on real quickly for individuals or organizations with the power to make it happen; even at a university that prides itself on being a “Green Light to Success”.

The University of North Texas (located in Denton, Texas) likes to pride itself on just how green it is, what they truly are is guilty of greenwashing. This university still uses 47 percent coal energy and 12 percent natural gas energy. This university also has a fracking site right on campus that borders a dorm! Yet they still plaster this image of being such a green school all over the place.

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Students: The World Needs You – Apply for the Greenpeace Semester

APPLY FOR THE GREENPEACE SEMESTER!

Me, on a decommissioned Duke/Progress Energy smokestack (see picture below). Arden, NC. Feb, 2012.

As humans, we sometimes find ourselves in positions that change the way we view the world, or how we fit into it. This week, as we focus on recruiting students for the Greenpeace Semester, I want to share some examples of how my own time in Washington, DC three years ago led me to many of the most profound and exciting experiences I have lived through.

Let me start backwards: I do research for Greenpeace’s PolluterWatch project exposing the lies of the bad guys. Think Koch Industries, ExxonMobil, Duke Energy, and other coal, oil, chemical and industrial interests. In order to protect their relentless pursuit of wealth, power and prestige, the people who lead these companies bankroll a network of propagandists to hijack our perceptions and our politics. I was introduced to this network as the climate denial machine, although their corporate agenda includes everything from cracking workers unions to suppressing voters to privatizing education.

The Greenpeace Semester led me into a climate denier conference in New York City organized by the Heartland Institute. I looked into the eyes of men who hate what I do. I shook their hands. I listened to them gripe about Greenpeace’s work to hold them accountable. I made small talk…and mischief. Continue reading

Leaving on a jet plane for a life-changing experience

When I got on the plane to DC to start my Greenpeace Semester adventure, I remember how excited I was about the idea of living in a big city for a while and maybe expanding my grasp on what the environmental movement was all about; I really had no idea how much the Greenpeace Semester (called the Greenpeace Organizing Term back in my day) would change my life.

I know it may sound cliche but I’d be lying if I didn’t admit that doing the Greenpeace Semester was the single most important thing I’ve ever done. Learning to climb, traveling across and/or out of the country, and meeting Greenpeace campaigners (people whose names I’d become so familiar with from the inundation of emails about signing this petition or what have you) were the superficial highlights I had been anticipating before actually starting the Semester. But what I gained from it was so much more substantial; learning how to run a real effective meeting on my campus, feeling confident being interviewed by a local news station, gaining skills to efficiently build a group or organization, knowing when and how to use non-violent direct action, drafting campaign plans, powermapping, learning what powermapping even was, and recognizing that I, that we, have the power to take on corporate injustices and truly create a safer, cleaner, greener world. Continue reading

Biting down on green apples

I was back home in the North Carolina mountains when I received word that the late Steve Jobs and then Apple CEO responded to Greenpeace’s Green my Apple campaign, and had, in fact, agreed to a “greener apple.”  This announcement from Apple meant a phase out of harsh chemicals in their products as well as a stronger recycling program.  As a recent alum of a Greenpeace Semester in the spring of 2007, I had a small, but meaningful hand in this campaign.  This news from Greenpeace meant so much to me, and I celebrated the victory with my family during dinner on the back porch.

There are few moments in this life when we feel simultaneously humble and powerful.  I feel it a lot when I am hiking back in North Carolina, and sharing this Greenpeace victory with my intrigued family was another one of those rare moments.

There are several opportunities we let slip through our fingers. They fall between the cracks of life while we keep on walking.  That night as I shared stories from my Greenpeace experience, I thanked my lucky stars that I had plucked that opportunity out of the air before it passed me by.

Not only did my semester with Greenpeace play a significant role in my current job with the organization, it opened the door for me to become a career environmentalist, not just a hobbyist.  When interviewed, celebrities often bring up how lucky they are to earn a paycheck doing what they really love. Lately I’ve been thinking, “No, I’m the lucky one.” Except it isn’t luck that brought me here doing what I love.  Rather it’s having the good sense to see an opportunity like the Greenpeace Semester show up in your inbox or in your Facebook news feed or on a poster on campus and deciding, “I’m gonna bite.”

And I’m so glad I did (literally).

Don’t let a great opportunity float by. Apply now for the Greenpeace Semester!

Students Call Duke Energy to #dumpALEC

Last Thursday, students wanted to make sure Duke Energy heard loud and clear that they need to #dumpALEC. So students held a national call in day, driving in hundreds of calls encouraging Duke Energy to #dumpALEC.  The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is a corporate bill mill that brings state lawmakers to the table with lobbyists and lawyers from large companies (Duke Energy, ExxonMobil and Koch Industries, for example) and front groups in order to write model state laws. These include widely reported controversies like voter suppression, blocks on clean energy and pollution controls, breaking unions, the S.B.1070 law allowing racial profiling in Arizona, and the “Stand Your Ground” laws involved in the shooting of Trayvon Martin.

From North Carolina, to Pittsburgh, to upstate New York and Michigan, students held events raising awareness about Duke’s dirty relationship.  University of North Carolina Wilmington student Caitlin Hall said:

“Although the event lasted hours Duke Energy stopped answering calls almost immediately, sending students to voicemail. The only person I was able to talk to directly was a frazzled assistant named Sherri. She inquired as to why they were receiving so many calls about this issue and who had organized the event, probably so they could figure out how to avoid something like this in the future. Of course there’s an easy way for that to happen: Duke just needs to #dumpALEC”

It’s not only Greenpeace that is calling for an end to this relationship, groups such as Color of Change, Credo Action, Common Cause, and Energy Action Coalition are continuing to call on Duke Energy to #dumpALEC. Take action and tell Duke Energy to #dumpALEC!

Duke Energy is guilty of heavily influencing our political system on local, state and national levels, however students at Greenpeace choose to focus in on one of Duke’s dirtiest relationships. Duke Energy has an unhealthy relationship with the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).

Beyond giving ALEC $116,000 since 2009, Duke Energy employees work directly with ALEC’s “Energy, Environment and Agriculture task force” to create model bills. ALEC’s anti-environmental agenda includes:

  • Withdrawing states from regional climate change programs,
  • Attacking state renewable energy standards,
  • Obstruction of clean air and water laws,
  • Keeping gas fracking chemicals secret

Join students across the country in asking Duke to #dumpALEC!

Greenpeace Semester: Meet the Fall 2012 class

     Meet Ellen, Karina, Hannah, Kris, Kaitlynd, Paulina, Drew, and Rachel.  They are the class this fall for the Greenpeace Semester, Greenpeace’s activist training program for young leaders.

They come from many different places, from Tennessee to Ohio to Oregon to Baja, Mexico. They are all united in their passion and commitment to being part of the solution to the world’s environmental problems, to challenging themselves to learn some of the fundamental skills of activism and then bring their new knowledge back to their communities.

And boy, are they ready.

Says Ellen, “A semester with Greenpeace will give me an inside look at what to prepare for in terms of my future career. I want to save forests, end nuclear power, protect endangered animals, reduce our carbon footprint, advocate sustainability, rid the world of toxic chemicals, and put an end to global warming!”

Stay tuned for more about this class; they’ll be doing great things this fall.

Want to join the Greenpeace Semester?  Applications are being accepted for spring – apply early to receive $100 off tuition.

Operation Tiger Campaign Victory

Written by: Josh Chamberland, Sophomore at Bowling Green State University, Greenpeace Semester Alum, Greenpeace Student Network Campus Coordinator

Operation Tiger was the first campaign I ran and took part in as a Campus Coordinator through the Greenpeace Student Network at Bowling Green State University (BGSU). It all started as an idea and a goal, to help stop the destruction of Indonesian rainforests by Asia Pulp and Paper. At the beginning of last year I took this campaign idea to the first environmental club on campus I found and after a couple meetings, I pitched the campaign idea. They weren’t up to running a campaign at that time, so I proceeded to organize a core group of friends who were interested in running this campaign with me.

The first semester started off fairly slow, just gathering information and having meetings with administrators to discuss our goals and see what they had to say. In the second semester a few friends and I went to the first ever Student Network Activist Convergence (SNAC). At SNAC, we really learned how to take the next steps needed for our campaign. When we returned, we were all super stoked to get back on campus to really bring change to BGSU that would have worldwide effects.

We officially kicked off the campaign to the public early second semester with a petition drive, calling on our President and Board of Trustees to commit to transitioning the university to using only 100% post-consumer recycled paper products all over campus. We had student’s dress up in tiger and orangutan suits to make the first official day of the petition exciting. Shortly after our event, our story was featured on the front page of our school newspaper the BG News. Continue reading