About Greenpeace: Greenpeace is an independent campaigning organisation that uses
a non -
violent direct action to expose global environmental problems and
to to force solutions which are essential to a green and peaceful future.
The goal of Greenpeace is to ensure that the ability of the earth to nurture the life in all its diversity.
How Greenpeace Australia Pacific Began: The first Australian protest under the Greenpeace banner was a direct
action against a whaling station in Albany, WA, in 1977.
The protestors included a newspaper journalist from Sydney and a few members of Greenpeace International. Together, they then established Greenpeace New South Wales.
Meanwhile, an Adelaide group,
Project Jonah, had also set out to stop
commercial whaling in
Australia. In the year, 1978, they did just that; and by
1979, as
Greenpeace Adelaide Incorporated, they were taking their
message around
the world.
During the 1980's, this fledgling organisation
protested against the
slaughter of baby harp seals in New foundland,
French nuclear testing in
the South Pacific and other disarmament
issues. Back home, they
campaigned against the uranium mining.
By the year of 1986, a
worldwideworld wide shift in
the environmental awareness
had begun.
Greenpeace International proposed the merger of the New
South Wales and as well as Adelaide
offices. For economic reasons and
to maximise public support.
Greenpeace Australia was incorporated, with
much fanfare, in 1987.
Greenpeace Pacific opened in Suva, Fiji, in 1994, the same year as the French underground nuclear testing program ended.
Pacific campaigns had previously been run from the Greenpeace New Zealand office in Auckland. It was in Auckland Harbour that the French bombed our flagship, the Rainbow Warrior, killing photographer Fernando Pereira. The bombing ricocheted around the world.
In early
1998 Greenpeace Australia and Greenpeace Pacific teamed up to
become become Greenpeace Australia Pacific (GPAP), an environmental force
working on
a range of issues for the region. GPAP now has more than
100,000 100,000 financial supporters.
Campaining the Pacific: Greenpeace’s long
history in the Pacific began
sometime in the early 1970s,
when when founder David McTaggart sailed his yacht, The Vega to
Moruroa in
protest against nuclear testing in Polynesia.
Since the
1980s, Greenpeace has campaigned extensively in the region
establishing establishing its first office in the Pacific (outside of Aotearoa/ New
Zealand) in
1994. It now has bases in Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and the
Solomon Solomon Islands.
In the 1980’s and 1990s the Warrior lead peace
flotillas to Moruroa and
relocated the population of Rongelap island
who were suffering health
effects from nuclear fallout. The ship's crew
also protested against
nuclear waste transports through the Pacific.
Today, in the Pacific, Greenpeace campaigns for sustainable fishing and to protect the ocean’s biodiversity, and works with local communities to oppose illegal and destructive logging and to develop eco-forestry projects in the Solomons and PNG. Greenpeace has also worked in the Pacific to eliminate toxic pollution and to prevent harmful climate change.
For more information on Greenpeace, visit the following link:
http://www.greenpeace.org/australia/