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Keywords
Cities
Climbing actions
Copy space
Darkness
Greenpeace activists
KWCI (GPI)
Low angle view
Morning
Offshore drilling
Oil (fossil fuel)
Oil (Industry)
Outdoors
Save the Arctic (campaign title)
Shell (commercial business)
Skyscrapers
Small group of people
Women
Shard Climbing Action in London to Save the Arctic
Six women climbers start their ascent of the Shard, London's tallest building, for the Save the Arctic campaign. They chose to climb the Shard because it towers over Shell’s three London offices. Shell is leading the oil companies’ drive into the Arctic. Greenpeace is campaigning for the area around the North Pole to be made a global sanctuary, off-limits to industrialization.
Unique identifier:
GP04OE7
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
11/07/2013
Locations:
Europe
,
London
,
United Kingdom
Credit line:
© David Sandison / Greenpeace
Size:
4760px × 3348px 7MB
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)
Containers
Shoot:
Shard Climbing Action in London to Save the Arctic
Six women climbers from Greenpeace climb the face of the Shard, London’s tallest building, as part of the Save the Arctic campaign. The women, who are from the UK, Canada, Sweden, Poland, Holland and Belgium, chose to climb the Shard because it towers over Shell’s three London offices, including the oil giant’s global headquarters on the Southbank of the Thames. The climbers were cheered by crowds gathered at the foot of the skyscraper and watched by tens of thousands through a live stream on the Greenpeace website. Shell is leading the oil companies’ drive into the Arctic, investing billions in its Alaskan and Russian drilling programmes. Shell has invested $5bn in its Arctic programme, but after a series of embarrassing mishaps – including a grounded rig and a fire on a drill ship - it was forced to abandon its plans to drill for oil off the coast of Alaska this summer. But the company has now signed a deal with Vladimir Putin and state-owned oil giant Gazprom to drill in the Russian Arctic, a region where regulation is lax and accidents are commonplace. Greenpeace is campaigning for the area around the North Pole to be made a global sanctuary, off-limits to industrialization. More than three million people have already joined the call at savethearctic.org.
Related Collections:
Six Women Climb the Shard to Save the Arctic (Photos & Videos)
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