Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Arctic-Sunrise-Salish-Sea-Visit-27MZIFJWLQWG6.htmlConceptually similarArctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6ICCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6I8Completed★★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6I7Completed★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS5XZCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6IBCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6HRCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS5XSCompleted★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6H8Completed★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6IDCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STS6I9Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitThe Arctic Sunrise sails towards Friday Harbor around the San Juan Islands in Washington. The Greenpeace Arctic Sunrise, sails the Salish Sea off the Washington coast near Seattle, Tacoma, Bellingham, and the San Juan Island. The ship is following the route that would experience a seven-fold increase in tar sands tanker oil traffic if the pipeline expansion is completed. The report documents the communities threatened by the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, which would worsen the effects of global warming, risk poisoning water, jeopardize the hundreds of thousands of jobs that depend on clean coasts, violate Indigenous sovereignty, and threaten the extinction of the Southern Resident Orca Whale, of which only 75 remain.Locations:North America-United States of AmericaDate:28 Jun, 2018Credit:© Emma Cassidy / GreenpeaceMaximum size:5000px X 3732pxKeywords:Climate (campaign title)-Day-KWCI (GPI)-MY Arctic Sunrise-Outdoors-SeasShoot:Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitThe Greenpeace Arctic Sunrise, sails the Salish Sea off the Washington coast near Seattle, Tacoma, Bellingham, and the San Juan Island. The ship is following the route that would experience a seven-fold increase in tar sands tanker oil traffic if the pipeline expansion is completed. The report documents the communities threatened by the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, which would worsen the effects of global warming, risk poisoning water, jeopardize the hundreds of thousands of jobs that depend on clean coasts, violate Indigenous sovereignty, and threaten the extinction of the Southern Resident Orca Whale, of which only 75 remain.