Environmental Protest Groups

 
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Facts about the state of the global environment read like quotes on a poster for an epic Hollywood movie. However, many people feel that governments are not taking the environment seriously enough.

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Match the words at the top with the descriptions below.

Exercise

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Environmental Protest Groups

Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've got ’till it's gone
They paved paradise and they put up a parking lot

(Joni Mitchell – Big Yellow Taxi)

Facts about the state of the global environment read like quotes on a poster for an epic Hollywood movie – expanding deserts in Africa, huge forest fires in Indonesia, serious shortages of fish in Europe, thousands of deaths from air pollution in Brazil, disappearing forests in the Amazon, melting ice-caps and increasing radiation levels in the polar regions. But just as there is no evil Lex Luther or Ernst Blofeld responsible for these disasters, there is no Superman or James Bond to save the world. The human race has caused these problems and we are going to have to work together to solve them.

However, many people feel that the governments of countries around the world are not taking environmental issues seriously enough. To allow the voices of concerned people to be heard, a large number of protest groups have been set up by ordinary people to raise awareness of the issues, and to put pressure on politicians to act before it is too late. A few of the organisations have become household names, particularly Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace. Two smaller groups, Surfers Against Sewage and Reclaim The Streets, are less well known, but take themselves just as seriously.

Surfers Against Sewage (SAS)

Surfers Against Sewage was founded in 1990 by water sports enthusiasts, who were becoming more and more concerned about the health risks they faced when using beaches in Cornwall in the UK. Human and toxic waste pumped into the sea was causing serious illnesses, and beach goers felt that they were “playing Russian Roulette with their health” every time they went into the water.

SAS alerted people to the problem by going to public events with their surfboards, where they handed out leaflets wearing wetsuits and gasmasks. They soon attracted the attention of the media and other concerned water users from around Britain and were able to put pressure on the government to ban dumping untreated waste in the sea, rivers and lakes. The group was so successful that in 1998, only 8 years after they started campaigning, the government agreed to spend 8.5 billion pounds on cleaning up Britain’s aquatic environment.

Surfers Against Sewage has acquired a cool image over the years. In 1999 the director of The Beach, a Hollywood blockbuster starring Leonardo Di Caprio, wanted to use the SAS logo on actors’ backpacks. SAS refused permission however, because they were concerned about the environmental damage that making the film had caused to the tiny tropical island of Phi Phi in Thailand.

Reclaim The Streets (RTS)

Reclaim The Streets was started in London in 1991 to campaign “FOR walking, cycling and cheap, or free, public transport, and AGAINST cars, roads and the system that pushes them.” RTS began by protesting against road building through unspoilt areas of the British countryside, and now have expanded their activities to draw attention to environmental, political, economic and social injustice around the world.

RTS campaigns by stopping traffic and turning roads and motorways into huge street parties. Members of the group dig up tarmac and plant trees, make beaches and paddling pools for children to play in, decorate the street with colourful banners, and give out free food and drink. A huge sound system is set up, bands, jugglers and clowns perform, and hundreds or even thousands of people dance and party. The carnival is usually broken up by the police after a few hours, and in the past some of the demonstrations have been marred by violence between police and protesters.

RTS doesn’t have any clear aims, it says that it is a ‘disorganisation’ rather than an organisation, since there is no one in charge, but the methods that the group uses have caught on, and are now used worldwide. As the RTS website says, “The Reclaim The Streets idea has grown up and left home, street parties and suchlike often happen without anyone in RTS London hearing about them until afterwards.”

Protest and the Internet

Both SAS and RTS have extensive websites providing information about their activities, and providing links to like-minded groups around the world. It seems that nowadays the Internet is helping more and more people express their dissatisfaction with the status quo, and work together to find solutions to the problems that the modern world faces.

Glossary

aquatic (adj): living or growing in, happening in, or connected with water

blockbuster (n): a book, film, etc that is very popular and successful

epic (n): a story or film which is very long and contains a lot of action

Ernst Blofeld: the villain in some James Bond films

found (v): to start an organization, especially by providing money

household name (n): someone or something that everyone knows

issue (n): an important subject or problem that people are discussing

Lex Luther: the villain in Superman

mar (v): to spoil something

paddling pool (n): a shallow pool that small children can play in

polar (adj): relating to the North or South Pole

Russian roulette (n): a very dangerous game of chance where each player aims at their own head with a gun which has one bullet in it and five empty chambers (= spaces where bullets could go)

status quo (n): the situation that exists now, without any changes

tarmac (n): a thick, black substance that is sticky when hot and is used to cover roads

toxic (adj): poisonous

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Comments

Ukraine EPL's picture

Good evening everyone. I represent Ukraine's environmental org. "Ecology.People.Law." Our main aim is to fight against the environmental injustice in Ukraine. So that's why this topic is very clothe to me. The problem of environmental protecting is very sharp in Ukraine. My organization does all the efforts to stop the environmental injustice, to follow the laws by polluters and to make the ecological situation better for our children, for our future..

Inda-Sokre's picture

Great...:) I love it 

ay_med's picture

Hello, I think that protecting environment is very far to be applied. Because of the absence of the political wills.

bahmid's picture

Officially there is a policy to tackle with the problems of environment but in reality the place is empty with concrete acts. Some residents have their own program to go on by creating green spaces and planting trees and amenaging  places supporting without government aid. And anyone in cities are worried by the bad system to collect wastes . Even there is no important industrial sites pollution is amplifying with the construction of roads and permissive policy to encourage the developing of the automobile park at the expense of the green and renewable energy   

call3004's picture

In my country, they throw sewage in sea, and there's a place where people swim and sewage is near them. People must protest to change this situation, because if they don't, politicians will not change a thing. 

salimsalim's picture

Greetings to all

lifevoice's picture

We are must be save the earth

freemelia77's picture

very interesting ..!! and informative ..tanks

algeriaknight's picture

           In my country, Algeria environmental groups don't exist at all. There are some associations claiming to protect the environment but they are more virtual than real associations. That's why I think it's high time we organized ourselves in active and efficient environmental groups to rise citizens awareness about the importance of protecting their environment. A simple example is plastic rubbish caused by the use plastic bags and plastic bottles that are thrown everywhere and profane the beauty of nature in my country.

Anutik's picture

We need to think about our world more carefully.  For example, in Russia and many other country people use a lot of cellophane. We buy milk, washing powder, etc. and every salesman put this product in separated cellophane, though each product has its own wrapping. As a result we have rubbish-bin full of such kind of cellophane. There isn't recycling industry in our country and we polute our nature. But we don't think about it, when we take a new parket in the shop.