Greenpeace East Asia Explained

Greenpeace East Asia
Type:Non-governmental organization
Founded Date:1997, Hong Kong
Location:Beijing, Hong Kong, Taipei, Seoul, Tokyo
Key People:Pang Cheung Sze (Executive Director)
Area Served:People's Republic of China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan
Focus:Environmentalism, peace
Method:campaigning, lobbying, research, consultancy

Greenpeace East Asia is an office serving the East Asia region of the global environmental organization Greenpeace. It is one of the largest international NGOs in China.

History

Greenpeace East Asia's first China office was opened in Hong Kong in 1997. Early actions included a blockade of a shipment of electronic waste from Australia and a campaign highlighting the dangers of PVC in children's toys.[1]

Before offices were formally opened in Guangzhou and Beijing in 2002, activists from the Hong Kong office ran several campaigns on the Chinese Mainland. These included investigations into electronic waste dumping in Guangdong province and a campaign to stop US-headquartered biotechnology firm Monsanto Company from patenting a Chinese indigenous soy bean variety.[2]

Early mainland-based campaigns focused on food and agriculture and electronic waste. Since then Greenpeace East Asia has broadened its mandate into efforts to urge China's wood products industry to import environmentally sound timber, clean up its polluted rivers and lakes, and highlight the urgency of stopping climate change.

Campaigns

Greenpeace East Asia runs five main campaigns: climate and energy, food and agriculture, toxics (water pollution), forests and a campaign on air pollution. The organisation uses non-violent direct action to draw attention to what it considers significant threats to the environment and also lobbies for solutions. It emphasizes that while "surging economic development in East Asia has brought widespread prosperity, [it] has also taken a severe environmental toll, both regionally and worldwide."[1]

The website also lists several achievements including:

Currently one of Greenpeace East Asia's key campaigns is to encourage China to reduce its reliance on coal as a power source and to speed up the development of the renewable energy sector instead.[5]

Apart from specific campaigns, they also work with local organisations from time to time for general advocacy, including with the Geography Society of PLK Vicwood KT Chong Sixth Form College between 2008 and 2009.

Research reports

In June 2021, it released Missing Brownfields- Hong Kong Brownfields Report 2021, a collaborative report with Liber Research Community where together, they found a total of 1,950 hectares of brownfield sites, 379 more hectares than the government was previously able to locate.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Achievements.
  2. Web site: العاب متاهات.
  3. Web site: A world without tigers? | Greenpeace East Asia . 2011-11-13 . 2017-01-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170110085943/http://www.greenpeace.org/eastasia/news/stories/forests/2010/a-world-without-tigers/ . dead .
  4. News: From plantation to mill: Asian paper company's 'unprecedented' sustainability commitment . Packaging World . 23 March 2014 . 22 April 2014 . 4 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304060501/http://www.packworld.com/sustainability/strategy/plantation-mill-asian-paper-companys-unprecedented-sustainability-commitment . dead .
  5. Web site: China's coal crisis | Greenpeace East Asia . 2011-09-20 . 2015-09-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150909232442/http://www.greenpeace.org/eastasia/news/stories/climate-energy/2008/coal-crisis/ . dead .
  6. Web site: 2021-06-10. Hong Kong NGOs find enough unidentified brownfield sites to build 95,000 homes. 2021-06-23. South China Morning Post. en.