Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/San-Juan-Islands-Shoreline-27MZIFJWL12ZT.htmlConceptually similarSan Juan Islands ShorelineGP0STS6KVCompleted★★★★San Juan Islands ShorelineGP0STS6KXCompleted★★★★San Juan Islands ShorelineGP0STS6L6Completed★★★★San Juan Islands ShorelineGP0STS6L7Completed★★★★San Juan Islands ShorelineGP0STS6L9Completed★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6I7Completed★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6ICCompleted★★★★San Juan Islands Wildlife and SceneryGP0STS6L0Completed★★★★Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitGP0STS6I8Completed★★★★★View AllGP0STS6L4San Juan Islands ShorelineThe Arctic Sunrise sails around San Juan Island and past South beach near Cattle Point during its Salish Sea visit. The Greenpeace ship the Arctic Sunrise is on a tour 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:San Juan Islands-United States of America-Washington (state)Date:28 Jun, 2018Credit:© Tim Aubry / GreenpeaceMaximum size:4480px X 6720pxKeywords:Beaches-Climate (campaign title)-Coastlines-Day-High angle view-KWCI (GPI)-Outdoors-SeasShoot:Arctic Sunrise Salish Sea VisitThe Greenpeace Arctic Sunrise display a banner messages on opposition to the tanker superhighway the the LNG proposal near the US Oil facility in Tacoma. The ship is on a tour 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.