Earth News from TerraDaily.com
Greenpeace activists board tanker in plastic protest
Seoul, Nov 30 (AFP) Nov 30, 2024
Greenpeace activists boarded a tanker off South Korea on Saturday in an action intended to draw attention to calls for a treaty to curb plastic pollution, the environmental group said.

Nearly 200 countries are in Busan to negotiate the deal, but there is little sign of agreement with just a day left before talks are due to end.

Greenpeace said the tanker Buena Alba, anchored off the Hanwha TotalEnergies complex, was scheduled to pick up propylene, which is used to manufacture plastic.

"The activists boarded the vessel peacefully and met no reaction from the vessel crew," said Greenpeace spokeswoman Angelica Pago.

"We painted 'PLASTIC KILLS' on the side of the vessel and the climbers successfully set up a camp," she told AFP.

"They intend to stay in order to continue putting pressure on the negotiators to resist fossil fuel and petrochemical industry interference in the talks and to deliver a treaty that firmly cuts plastic production."

A spokesman for South Korea's coast guard said police had been "deployed on the ship, and we are making warning announcements to facilitate a safe disembarkation".

He said a "thorough investigation" would be carried out to determine if there were any "illegal elements" to the protest.

Attempts to reach an agreement on curbing plastic pollution have stalled over several key sticking points, including whether to cut new plastic production.

Dozens of countries, backed by environmental groups, insist a treaty without production cuts will fail to solve the problem, but a group of largely oil-producing states is fiercely opposed.

"The brave activists that boarded that vessel today show the courage and should inspire governments here to hold the line and do what everyone knows is obvious," Greenpeace delegation head Graham Forbes told reporters in Busan.

The negotiations have reached a "pivotal moment", he said, but "a handful of governments... are looking backwards and refusing to take the steps necessary for us all to advance".

"I think we are at a very risky moment right now of being sold out, and that would be an absolute catastrophe," Forbes said.

Local police and Wooil Shipping, the Korean company that manages the vessel, told AFP later on Saturday that the ship was Japanese-owned.

"It is private property, but activists are occupying it without permission," a Wooil Shipping spokesman said. "As a result, we haven't been able to load any cargo all day."

A spokesman from Hanwha TotalEnergies Petrochemical, contacted by AFP, was not able to comment directly on the incident.

sah-roc/kaf-cdl/dhc

HANWHA CORPORATION

TotalEnergies





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
ESA pinpoints 3I/ATLAS's path with data from Mars
Chandrayaan-3 lunar mission achieves key flyby milestones
Reading a quantum clock costs more energy than running it, study finds

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Redesigned satellite battery set to advance LEO power systems
Adoption of dynamic control technology improves EV charging grid integration
Solar plant grid stability improves as Cordoba researchers deploy high-speed sensor system

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
'The war of tomorrow will begin in space': Macron
UN watchdog calls on Iran to urgently allow 'long overdue' uranium stockpile verification
How drones are altering contemporary warfare

24/7 News Coverage
Ancient RNA recovery reveals gene activity in Ice Age mammoths
6 Things to Know From NASA About New US, European Sea Satellite
Satellites and AI equip policymakers to assess global climate adaptation progress


ADVERTISEMENT



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.