600 STRIP NAKED ON GLACIER IN GLOBAL WARMING PROTEST

Environmental Panorama
International
August of 2007

 

Chilling message from wear-nothing activists to do-nothing politicians

18 August 2007 - Aletsch Glacier, Switzerland — An emergency provokes extreme responses: human beings in danger will abandon social niceties, etiquette, and the norms of acceptable behaviour to raise an alarm any way they can when lives are in danger. Today, six hundred people shed their clothes on a glacier in the Swiss Alps to bodily cry out for help against a planetary emergency: global warming.

Parental warning: the story below contains nudity

The nude volunteers posed for us and renowned naked "installation" artist Spencer Tunick on the Aletsch Glacier.

Without clothes, the human body is vulnerable, exposed, its life or death at the whim of the elements. Global warming is stripping away our glaciers and leaving our entire planet vulnerable to extreme weather, floods, sea-level rise, global decreases in carrying capacity and agricultural production, fresh water shortages, disease and mass human dislocations.

If global warming continues at its current rate, most glaciers in Switzerland will completely disappear by 2080, leaving nothing but valleys and slopes strewn with rock debris. Over the last 150 years, alpine glaciers have reduced in size by approximately one third of their surface and half of their mass, and this melting is accelerating. The Aletsch Glacier retreated 115 meters (377 feet) in a single year from 2005 to 2006.

Eight years to act
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) the world only has eight years remaining to take the urgent action needed to curb catastrophic climate change. Without swift action, the damage could become irreversible. Never before has humanity been forced to grapple with such an immense environmental crisis.

Climate change now requires fast and courageous political decisions to radically cut green-house gas emissions and stabilise global warming. Governments around the world must know that the people they represent expect and demand them to take action.

Known around the world for his installations, Spencer Tunick wants people to know that global climate change is not an abstract issue, but a hazardous threat which affects us all.

"I want my images to go more than skin-deep. I want the viewers to feel the vulnerability of their existence and how it relates closely to the sensitivity of the world's glaciers", he said.

Barely active
These volunteers had the bravery to do something to raise the alarm. Not enough people do.

What are you doing? You don't need to get naked on a glacier to be part of the energy [r]evolution. You can sign up for the Greenpeace Seven Steps campaign and start easy: with simple ways to improve your energy efficiency. If you are a student, you can set up a Solar Generation group on your university campus. Vote for candidates that are willing to take on the coal and oil industry. Stand in front of a bulldozer to stop the build of a new coal-fired plant. Change the way you use energy. Install solar panels.

Or you can come up with your own audacious means to raise the alarm.

You may not need to get naked, but you do need to roll up your sleeves.

+ More

Bering witness in a mini-sub

14 August 2007 - Alaska, United States — Our good ship Esperanza is currently out in the Bering Sea, one of the world's wildest oceans. Situated between Alaska and Kamchatka at the western edge of Russia, the Bering covers over 2 million square km of the northernmost region of the Pacific Ocean, and is home to some of the largest unexplored submarine canyons on the planet.

The Esperanza is returning to the region to continue research work begun in 2006 - exposing the impacts of overfishing, and documenting some of these previously unexplored canyon habitats. And this time, to make life a little easier and even more exciting Esperanza is equipped with two new mini-submarines capable of diving over 1,000 metres to bring back photos and video from the depths.

So far large tracts of cold-water corals are being found at between 50 to 1,000 metres. These slow-growing colonies can have lifespans of hundreds or even thousands of years, and act as refuges for all kinds of fish species. They are crucial to the continued existence of this ocean ecosystem, but are also extremely vulnerable to being wiped out by one drag from a bottom trawler's net.

Join the Espy and crew on the Bering Witness 2007 tour as they make a compelling case for the creation of marine reserves to ensure the conservation of these important habitats, which are believed to contain species found nowhere else on earth. Check out the crew's weblog.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International (http://www.greenpeace.org)
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