How will history remember Duke Energy CEO Jim Rogers: climate champion or criminal?

Jim Rogers has a choice between clean and dirty energy.

Jim Rogers has a choice between clean and dirty energy.

“We must move at ‘China speed’ to combat global warming.”

That’s what Jim Rogers, CEO of the largest utility in the country and one of the world’s biggest carbon polluters, Duke Energy, said once upon a time. Now Rogers, who has agreed to retire at the end of 2013, has seven months left to prove he meant it, and determine how history will judge his climate legacy: as a leader who helped start a clean energy revolution, or a polluter who told a nice story about global warming, but never acted to stop it.

That’s why Greenpeace and NC WARN, one of our allies in North Carolina, published an ad today in the Charlotte Observer challenging Rogers to stop talking and start acting, by directing his company to invest in solar energy, wind energy, and energy efficiency throughout the Duke Energy service territory. Continue reading

2013 hurricane season expected to be much busier than usual

A building collapsed into floodwater near the Route 528 (Herbert Street) Bridge one day after Hurricane Sandy hit the New Jersey and New York.

While those impacted by Hurricane Sandy are still struggling to get their lives back to normal, forecasters at Colorado State University anticipate a hurricane season with 11 more storms than average. There is now a 72 percent chance that a major hurricane will hit the U.S. coast in 2013 compared to a previous average of 52 percent. Continue reading

Brrrrrrrr: Arctic ice loss responsible for our chilly spring

Although it’s Cherry Blossom festival time in Washington D.C., Greenpeace’s United States headquarters, we’re still bundled in our winter gear. Turns out that the same warmer temperatures causing Arctic ice loss at record-breaking speeds are responsible for the extreme winter weather and cold temperatures experienced in much of Europe and North America. The ice loss in the Arctic broke a previous 2007 record shrinking 18 percent, according to data published by National Snow & Ice Data Center last fall. Continue reading

President Obama signs relief bill for Superstorm Sandy victims. They’re gonna need it.

A building floats near the New Jersey shore in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy.

Three months ago, a superstorm charged by climate change ravaged the coast from Carribean to Canada killing nearly 200 people and causing billions in damages.  Yesterday, President Obama signed a $50 billion federal bill providing desperately needed aid to the impacted regions. Continue reading

Year in PHOTOS: Greenpeace celebrates a year of global victories thanks to YOU

From stopping “scientific whaling” in South Korea to protecting the Arctic from Shell’s oil rigs to shutting down dirty coal plants here in the United States, we’re celebrating a 2012 full of victories for our planet. But none of it would have been possible without the help of each of you who choose to support our work.  Whether we’re pressuring a major company to clean up their supply chain or convincing the government to ban dirty energy, none of it would be possible without our dedicated supporters.  It’s with the positive momentum of 2012 that we continue to campaign for our futures the next year and the next year and the next year. Continue reading

An Open Letter to Barack Obama: We Are Running Out of Time

Dear Mr. President,

My Name is Kumi Naidoo, I am the Executive Director of Greenpeace International, I also serve as President of the Global Campaign for Climate Action (www.tcktcktck.org) and serve as Global Ambassador of the Global Call to Action Against Poverty (www.whiteband.org). But, today I write to you as an African, as a person from the developing world and as a parent. Continue reading

Thanksgiving Feast in Rockaway during Hurricane Sandy Relief

Yesterday, residents and volunteering occupants of Rockaway Park in Queens NYC gathered at hurricane relief hubs to share Thanksgiving dinner with one another. Here’s video of the afternoon feast, the solar arrays powering the event, and some speeches from organizers and residents:

Despite conditions that still feel alien—sand and dust and rubble under the brilliant sun—the community feasted away on turkey and stuffing and mashed potatoes at a gathering powered by solar electricity and human determination. 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.

PHOTOS: Hurricane Sandy aftermath, 3 weeks later

A burned out section of the Breezy Point section of Queens, New York still sits largely untouched.

While most of the news headlines have moved on, the devastation of Hurricane Sandy is still very real for folks in New York and New Jersey. As most of us are preparing for Thanksgiving meals, thousands will be without their homes this holiday season along the Atlantic coast.

As part of a solar generator coalition providing clean energy for those still without power,   Greenpeace is still there with our solar truck, the Rolling Sunlight.  Find out ways you can help this effort provide its sources most effectively to those in the most impacted neighborhoods. Continue reading

Ken Burns: Before Sandy, there was the Dust Bowl

Originally posted to Grist, by James West.

As the East Coast licks its wounds from superstorm Sandy, many in New York and New Jersey are still without power, wondering how on Earth it got this bad. Ken Burns, the great innovator of the American documentary, thinks this is the perfect time to seek some wisdom from generations past.

His new film, The Dust Bowl, tells the story of the the worst human-made ecological disaster in U.S. history. For it, Burns and his team tracked down the last remaining survivors of the catastrophic dust storms of the 1930s and matched their intimate stories (most were children at the time) with lush archival footage. Continue reading