Close
Contact Us
Help
Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Get link
Keywords
Actions and protests
Beaches
Day
Direct communications
Espace Léopold (EU parliament building)
European Parliament (organisation)
European Union (EU)
Greenpeace volunteers
Hands
Humour
KWCI (GPI)
Nuclear (campaign title)
Nuclear energy symbol
Office buildings
Office workers
Outdoors
Props
Radiation measurement
Radioactive waste
Women
Radioactive Waste Action in Brussels
A Greenpeace volunteer holds an ironic holiday post card reading "Sellafield, Wish you weren't here" with the nuclear symbol, in front of the European Union Parliament building during a Greenpeace action were radiation specialists have delivered samples of radioactive waste in two concrete and lead-lined containers collected from Sellafield, UK and other unsecured public locations in France, Belgium and Niger to the door of EU Parliament. The activity is to remind MEPs, in their last plenary session, before considering a new nuclear waste law that there is no solution to nuclear waste.
Unique identifier:
GP0278S
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
07/10/2010
Locations:
Belgium
,
Brussels
,
Europe
Credit line:
© Philip Reynaers / Greenpeace
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)
Containers
Shoot:
Radioactive Waste Action in Brussels
Greenpeace activists and radiation specialists deliver radioactive waste to the door of the European Union Parliament building to remind MEPs in their last plenary session before considering a new nuclear waste law that there is no solution to nuclear waste. The nuclear waste, secured in two concrete and lead-lined containers, was collected from unsecured public locations (Sellafield beach in the UK; the seabed at la Hague in France; the banks of the Molse Nete River in Belgium; and from the uranium mining village of Akokan in Niger).
Related Collections:
Radioactive Waste Action at the European Parliament in Brussels (All Photographers)
Conceptually similar