Climate crisis: Greenpeace activists detained, stop coal shipment in Poland

Gdansk, Poland – Greenpeace activists have been detained as part of a climate emergency protest to stop a vessel from unloading coal in the port of Gdansk in Poland. 

Greenpeace’s flagship the Rainbow Warrior was still anchored in the Gdansk port at 0300 CEST on Tuesday, preventing a shipment of coal imported from Mozambique from being unloaded.

Earlier, activists had painted the slogan ‘Poland Beyond Coal 2030’ on the side of the ship’s hull as part of the protest in which activists also displayed slogans saying ‘No Future in Coal’. 

“This is a climate emergency and we need to take action now. This is our moment of truth and there is no turning back. We are taking action along with the millions of other people around the world demanding an end to fossil fuels. We have no time to waste,” said Greenpeace Poland Program Director, Paweł Szypulski. 

“Instead of protecting Polish citizens and the country, the Polish government is looking after the interests of the coal lobby as it continues to import coal and block progress within the European Union to achieve an ambitious climate neutrality target.”

Polish authorities detained a number of Greenpeace activists before masked and armed border guards boarded the Rainbow Warrior late at night and forced entry by breaking a window with a sledge hammer. Those on board the ship are currently being detained.

“The Polish authorities should act as quickly and decisively to address the climate crisis as they do in suppressing peaceful protests. These activists have had the courage to draw attention to Poland’s climate destroying energy policy and in response they’ve been threatened with machine guns. This is unacceptable. We call on the Polish government to change course now and end the age of coal,” said Marek Józefiak, coordinator of the Climate and Energy campaign in Greenpeace Poland.

Instead of investing in renewables, the Polish government’s energy policy facilitates the continued import of coal, mainly from Russia, but also from countries as distant as Australia, Colombia or Mozambique.  

Greenpeace Poland is demanding that the Polish government commit to a coal phase-out by 2030. This is part of an international call across the month of September to demand a transfer to renewable energy and hold the fossil fuel industry accountable for the climate crisis. 

On 20 September, three days before the UN Secretary-General’s Climate Action Summit in New York, where leaders will be called to come with plans not speeches, millions of people across the world will participate in youth-led strikes to demand transformative action to address the climate crisis. 

To keep global warming to 1.5°C and prevent a climate catastrophe, Greenpeace is calling on the EU to achieve total decarbonisation by 2040 and to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 65% by 2030.

Photos can be access here.

Contacts:

Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0)20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org

Follow @greenpeacepress on twitter for our latest international press releases

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