The History of Greenpeace: The Evolution of Green Extremism

From The Word Merchant

Stephen Heins, The Word Merchant

The $345 million judgment against Greenpeace is not just a legal footnote; it is a long-overdue reckoning for an organization that lost its moral compass decades ago. For those of us who have watched the steady decline of the environmental movement from a pursuit of genuine conservation to a cynical machine of manufactured outrage, this verdict feels like a necessary correction.

When I consider how far Greenpeace has drifted, I often think of the perspective of its own co-founder, Dr. Patrick Moore. Moore, who helped launch the organization in 1971, eventually walked away precisely because he saw the rot setting in. He famously noted that while he was moving toward a path of “sensible environmentalism,” the organization he helped build was moving in the opposite direction: toward an agenda that he described as “anti-science, anti-business, and downright anti-human.”

The Evolution of Extremism

Moore’s observation perfectly captures the transition we’ve seen. In its early days, the movement focused on concrete issues—like stopping nuclear test and even save the whales—that resonated with a public seeking to preserve natural beauty. But over the years, that mission was displaced by a desire for perpetual conflict.

As Moore observed, the modern environmental movement has become addicted to “doom and gloom” scenarios, prioritizing fear-mongering over logic. They no longer want to solve problems; they want to sustain the appearance of a crisis, because a crisis is what keeps the Green donations flowing.

Accountability in the Courtroom

The Dakota Access Pipeline lawsuit, which led to this staggering $345 million judgment, wasn’t some “corporate attack” on free speech, as Greenpeace now frantically claims. It was a court of law responding to evidence of a coordinated effort to disrupt commerce and incite chaos. Their unlawful tactics were put on display in the DAPL trial.

The jury found that this was not a matter of a few passionate individuals standing on a hillside; they found Greenpeace liable for conspiracy, defamation, and tortious interference. This is the key that the “Green” propaganda machine tries to hide: the difference between protest and “lawfare.”

When an organization helps form professional protesters, provides training, shares sensitive operational intelligence, and equips activists with lockboxes to sabotage construction equipment, they have moved past the realm of “peaceful resistance.”

They transitioned into an active lawless participant in an economic attack. The legal system, in its wisdom, held them responsible for the consequences of their own actions. They wanted to play a high-stakes game of sabotage, and now they are discovering that the price of the ticket is their own financial viability.

The Shell Game of Victimhood

Greenpeace’s current strategy is as transparent as it is desperate. By labeling this a “SLAPP” (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) case and running to foreign courts to escape a U.S. judgment, they are attempting to engage in international forum shopping. They are hoping their membership base won’t look at the actual facts of the North Dakota trial—the conspiracy, the deceit, and the deliberate targeting of Energy Transfer’s infrastructure.

They are trying to spin a narrative that they are victims of “Big Oil.” But let’s be clear: this is about an organization that thought it could use its massive, tax-exempt platform to bypass the law whenever it found a project inconvenient to its ideological goals. They were caught red-handed.

A Necessary Return to Reality

The “Climate Truth Tellers” and other social media initiatives we see today are simply the frantic gasps of a movement that knows it has lost its grip on the truth. When you have to hire and train volunteers to “flood the zone” with pre-approved talking points, it is a glaring admission that you are no longer winning the debate on the merits of the anti-hydrocarbons gospel.

Patrick Moore’s departure was a canary in the coal mine that many environmental believers chose to ignore. He saw that the movement was shedding its scientific roots in favor of an ungainly political extremism.

Today, that extremism has a $345 million price tag. If this judgment forces the public to finally question the credibility and the methods of these professional agitators, then it will have served the environment far more than any of their staged protests ever did.

The era of unchecked “activism” that masks itself as science while practicing inhumane sabotage is reaching its end. We are witnessing the slow, painful process of reality catching up to the Greenpeace propaganda. And frankly, it’s about time.

A critical look at the history of Greenpeace from a co-founder’s perspective

This video provides a deep dive into Dr. Patrick Moore’s personal reflections on why he left Greenpeace and his critiques of the organization’s shift toward extreme, anti-scientific activism, which directly mirrors the concerns you have highlighted regarding their current trajectory.

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35 Comments
Tom Halla
June 13, 2026 2:30 pm

Given Greenpeace’s behavior in that case, a RICO prosecution would have been in order.

Sweet Old Bob
June 13, 2026 2:47 pm

Watermellons

June 13, 2026 3:00 pm

The issues of ‘mission creep’ and ‘intellectual rot’ aren’t limited to Greenpeace concerning DAPL. They now exist, sadly, inside WWF, Sierra Club, Union of Concerned Scientists, and a host of lesser others like NRDC in the US. Something is true about the old adage, “The road to hell is paved with good intentions.”
There are unfortunately too few Dr. Moore. Fun factoid. After Dr. Moore committed ‘heresy’ by acting on an obvious truth, Greenpeace expunged him totally from its history record.

As a recent criminal indictment example in a related sphere, the SPLC was funding right wing organization criminal activities in order to solicit donations against them. Police informants are not supposed to also commit murder like Whitey Bulgar did—SPLC is equivalent to Whitey Bulgar.

MarkW
Reply to  Rud Istvan
June 13, 2026 5:22 pm

Being disliked by the extreme left is not evidence that a group is “right wing”.

Gregg Eshelman
Reply to  Rud Istvan
June 14, 2026 2:28 am

The World Wildlife Fund lost the plot when they sued World Wrestling Federation over the use of the letters WWF, and somehow won. Yet AFAIK they’ve never sued any other company or organization with the initials WWF.

They claimed World Wrestling Federation’s use of WWF caused “confusion” and forced them to have to use their panda logo and spell out their full name.

Nooo. It’s trademark law that requires them to use their logo and full name often enough to maintain the trademark rights.

That’s why International Business Machines is just IBM, Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing became just 3M, National Cash Register became just NCR. The companies kept using the short forms because they were easy for their customers to remember, so they dropped their full names.

If they’ve abandoned registration and use of their old full names, new companies technically could register them but I bet they’d have a legal battle, which in a sane court they’d have to win due to abandonment of trademark, but it’d be expensive.

ResourceGuy
June 13, 2026 3:23 pm

And that’s just one of thousands of nonprofits that have radicalized without proper tracking and investigation.

Reply to  ResourceGuy
June 13, 2026 3:33 pm

I am ok with an NGO that starts out with a stated ‘radical’ purpose. Those who agree, contribute. Those who don’t, don’t. Things will sort out if government funding is kept out of the equation.
I am NOT ok with an NGO whose original purpose radically morphs. SPLC is but one of many examples. Such ‘fraud’ will not sort out.

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Rud Istvan
June 13, 2026 4:42 pm

The line between radicalized and not is complicated if the nonprofit is promoting green energy using forced labor components supported in the EU as the dumping ground for cheap slave made solar. The nonprofits actively promote causes while equally looking the other way and supporting ignorance. They should know better in Europe with their legacy of slave labor death camps in WW2.

Rational Keith
June 13, 2026 4:37 pm

Typical of activists of Marxist roots.

Rational Keith
June 13, 2026 4:49 pm

Beware that Patrick Moore was NOT a founder of Greenpeace, nor was the violent Paul Watson.

Moore was on the nuclear test protest ship, Watson was not.

Patrick Moore’s achievement was in organizing the outfit with legal protection against use of its name, as people around the world of varying ability and beliefs were calling themselves Greenpeace.

The organization was founded as the The Don’t Make a Wave Committee, from fear that the nuclear test in the Aleutian Islands would cause a tidal wave, but quickly expanded to Greenpeace.

Years later Patrick Moore woke up one morning tired of being negative, so changed his allegiance. He grew up in a town dependent on resource industries, so didn’t reject that out of hand. An excellent activist for good.

Greenpeace – Wikipedia

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Rational Keith
June 13, 2026 4:56 pm

Tidal wave? So they were science impaired in many ways at the beginning, paving the way for future anti-science campaigns

Russell Cook
Reply to  Rational Keith
June 13, 2026 5:58 pm

Wikipedia is not a reliable source of info on controversial matters. From Patrick Moore’s April 22, 2008 Wall Street Journal article, he himself said it was Greenpeace’s anti-science attempt to get chlorine banned that was the impetus for him to leave Greenpeace. Better to get info firsthand from him directly on how that group formed:

Leon de Boer
Reply to  Rational Keith
June 14, 2026 5:19 am

The funny part about history is any idiot can interpret what they want from it and wikipedia is no different.

So lets actually look at the history of greenpeace from there own site in Australia, which hasn’t been doctored by zealots which sort of matches wikipedia but with some additional info
https://www.greenpeace.org.au/about-us/history/

Notice something when you go down to the boat “Greenpeace” and who they represent, there are only 3 people on board representing Greenpeace. You may also read the historic archives of greenpeace which was archived by the way back time machine.

The interesting part of the wikipedia entry is they have completely removed the financial crisis out of the record … it’s worth reading
https://archive.org/details/greenpeacehowgro00weyl

In January 1977 at the annual general meeting of the Greenpeace Foundation, Moore ran for president against Bob Hunter and lost by a single vote. Soon after, Hunter steps down with the organization deeply in debt and Moore assumed the presidency.

Now look at the crap you wrote which is that all he did was organize protection of the name Greenpeace, he did that as president of Greenpeace … you leave that little fact out.

So basically you have shown your bias and spots because you are omitting key details. I wouldn’t trust a single thing you post on this subject because your are filtering history.

Reply to  Rational Keith
June 14, 2026 7:40 am

I have found that for any subject that is controversial, Wikipedia is very biased toward a leftist revisionist “history.”

Reply to  Rational Keith
June 14, 2026 1:01 pm

No, he was a founder of Greenpeace this was talked about right here 12 years ago showing actual Greenpeace website pages that has him listed as a founder as shown in the link below:

Greenpeace disappears a founder, much like ‘The Commissar Vanishes’ in Soviet Russia
LINK

pwwatson8888
June 13, 2026 4:54 pm
MarkW
June 13, 2026 5:21 pm

Greenpeace has been playing this game for many years. I wonder how many more lawsuits are currently in the works?

Edward Katz
June 13, 2026 5:56 pm

The public has been smelling out these eco-extremist outfits for some time now and has been recognizing that they and leftist governments have the same goals. Just as the latter got aboard the climate crisis bandwagon to generate tax revenue, Greenpeace and its ilk saw opportunities to attract consistent donations and invest in green product manufacturing that it hoped would convince governments to mandate their purchases. Consumers finally got wind of the scam when they saw living costs being driven up, while climate events just demonstrated their usual seasonal and annual variations. The very fact that some countries dropped or scaled back their carbon pricing has been evidence that emissions reductions to supposedly save the planet is not so urgent after all.

sherro01
June 13, 2026 6:09 pm

There is only so much that can be achieved by merely writing about a social problem like extreme and criminally liable unlawful activism labelled as environmentalism.
If you seek to get rid of it, you actually have to do something more about it than bleating.
I learned this (actually, I knew it inherently) early in my career. In mid-career, aged around 40, I gained support from the Board of my employer to bring the then Federal Minister for Environment through the Australian legal system to the highest Court we have. It was novel, it was expensive, it produced no useful verdict, but it led the way by showing to other aggrieved parties that remedial action was possible.
The rest of Australia did not much follow this type of path to do more than speak. Harmful radical environmentalism grew largely unchallenged to the present time. People are content to sit back and let it harm them every day. In elections, the formal Green parties have long captured only tiny support, typically around 5 to 10% of the vote. A large majority of voters do not want Greens.
These Green officials are not productive workers making objects demanded by society and income-producing by international trade. They are full time thinking how to grow their ideology and interfere in the lives of others, often with the unearned assistance of taxpayers through tax-free treatment as ‘not for profit’ non-government (NGO) organisations. They produce nothing concrete or tangible, only words and actions of protest. Who wants that?
Here are some ideas that could give rise to corrective action. First, legal challenges to the tax-free status of these bludgers should be actioned. Second, where actual financial loss has happened to innocent folk (such as led to the $345 million fine for Greenpeace), go to Court to seek recovery and optionally punitive damages to deter future repetitions. Third, create anti-Green special interest groups that offer to the public some cases by case alternatives to proposed Green actions. More ideas are welcomed, this is but a start.
The cost to society is enormous. For one example, Australia has made laws since 2000 to prohibit peaceful nuclear energy development. The laws were made in a shoddy deal between minor Green parties and the then national government as a favour to the Greens for ‘allowing’ Australia to have a new reactor for medical pharmaceutical production.
No minor group should have this power to prohibit, by bypassing long-time accepted procedures. There is an element of illegal coercion about this shoddy deal. Step up somebody, challenge it.
(I am elderly and ill and am not well placed to do it myself.) Geoff S

June 13, 2026 7:20 pm

Greenpeace started out trying to save the whale, which the use of fossil fuels was already doing.

Now they are against the very thing that saved the whales.

Now all they are interested in is how much “green” they can siphon from the climate trough and from virtue-seeking gullible fools..

Gregg Eshelman
Reply to  bnice2000
June 14, 2026 2:32 am

Kerosene from crude oil literally saved the whales because it was much lower in cost due to greater supply. Far easier and less dangerous to obtain, and higher quality. Didn’t go rancid like whale oil and it burned brighter and cleaner.

Reply to  bnice2000
June 14, 2026 12:24 pm

Greenpeace is a big financial engine for the people at the top, who, like all top NGO activists, pull down lavish salaries.

June 13, 2026 9:50 pm

Greenpiss would be a more apropiate name for an organization that does nothing else then to piss on the other’s side of the fence…time that the fence comes down and the gloves off as well.

Rod Evans
June 14, 2026 12:39 am

The tax exemptions and tax payer support for charities via gift aid, initially handed to them as a privilege, reflecting the good work/deeds being progressed is now abused and weaponised on an industrial scale.

There needs to be a reset on exactly what constitutes a charity. One of the of the prime filters must be, is the charity apolitical?

The sad evolution of charities over the past 40 years becoming vehicles for protest rather than organisations seeking to deliver the mission statement is becoming all too common.
For evidence of the changing nature of charities turn the television on during daytime broadcasting hrs and be amazed at the length and cost of advertising time now spent by so called charities.
We have allowed a faux virtue culture to evolve riding high on the mandated tax payers contribution. The scale of big charity along with its management practices and astonishing remuneration, consuming the majority of gifted funds has got to be subject to investigation and criticism where necessary.
The cosy relationship between the charitable industry and state agencies has become toxic it must be stopped. it has now become dangerously antisocial.
The so called Green movement in our politics is not a benign group of do gooders holding afternoon tea parties to garner support for a good cause. The extremism we now see blocking out our roads, causing damage in our museums or our monuments, plus indoctrination in our schools is the product of poisonous ideology. It is being funded by our own tax dollars and pounds.
The time for a correction has arrived.

Gregg Eshelman
Reply to  Rod Evans
June 14, 2026 2:34 am

“Charitable” organizations where the people in charge of it end up with luxury cars and large mansions need to be prosecuted as organized crime.

June 14, 2026 12:57 am

The video seems to have been taken down from YouTube …

Robin Andrew
Reply to  Eric Vieira
June 14, 2026 4:10 am

Correct, the video has also been removed from any Google search (other than a link to this WUWT post). No surprise.

June 14, 2026 1:33 am

Have been confronted with Greenpeace actions against chlorine and chlorine products like PVC in the 1990’s. Still am very grateful to Dr. Moore for his defence of chlorine products at that time.

At that time I was working in a large chlorine/VCM/PVC factory in The Netherlands and Greenpeace activist occupied the salt storage, so that the production had to stop.
A few days later they had to leave by law indinctment, but they were all over the news, which of course was their main purpose.

As we were sure that PVC was environmentally not worse than any other plastic and much better than glass or metals, we started a counter action of workers in the chlorine/PVC industry, the “Chlorophiles” and started counteractions where we could expect where Greenpeace should show up against chlorine or PVC.
https://ferdinand-engelbeen.be/chlorophiles/en/en_index.html

With success, as they didn’t like confrontations before TV camera’s, where we accused them of giving false information…
At a certain moment we did publish a work with near 200 negative citations about Greenpeace, in different languages: “The hidden side of Greenpace”. No problem, as we cited within the right context, without changing anything. Except in Germany: the law there is so that if you cite someone, you have to prove yourself that what you cite is true, no matter who was the original author…

So Greenpeace took us to court in Hamburg, Germany…
We had a very good lawyer, who could track lawsuits that Greenpeace lost in other countries and Greenpeace had to pay their victims:
They needed about a year to find where Greenpeace’s money was: at the Bahama’s, like most criminal organisations…
After two years of debate back and fort, the Judge in Hamburg did give a mixed judgement…
https://ferdinand-engelbeen.be/chlorophiles/en/cases/en_gp_ham.html

Gregg Eshelman
Reply to  Ferdinand Engelbeen
June 14, 2026 2:40 am

Another one was lead and PVC. The common process of manufacturing PVC pipe used a compound containing lead, but the finished plastic had zero lead in it.

It didn’t matter that it was easy to prove PVC pipe was lead free. The “greens” tantrumed over “lead in plastic pipe” long and loud enough that California demanded lead free PVC pipe production processes.

So the pipe industry developed a process that used zero lead, for no difference in the finished product – except higher price because the lead free process cost more. Higher priced plumbing = higher priced houses.

Reply to  Gregg Eshelman
June 14, 2026 11:53 am

Speaking of lead and chlorine, we used liquid chlorine for disinfection connected to an evaporator at the water plant I retired from. When replacing an empty one ton cylinder with a full one, we connected the valve on the tank to the manifold using a new lead washer.
We briefly tried using fiber washers. We had more leaks and the fiber washers didn’t come off as cleanly as the lead washers when replacing an empty cylinder. The fiber left bits behind. We had to be very careful not to scratch the smooth surface of the valves.
Zero lead made it to the evaporators or the drinking water.

PS When I say “liquid chlorine”, I don’t mean sodium hypochlorite. It was chlorine gas under pressure.

sherro01
Reply to  Ferdinand Engelbeen
June 14, 2026 7:32 pm

Ferdinand,
In the early 1970s I managed a joint venture with a large Dutch company in the chlorine and salt business around Hengelo and Enschede. We had a pilot plant in Australia using a fluid bed reactor and 10 tonnes of chlorine a day by to strip the iron out of ilmenite to make synthetic rutile at 1050 degrees C and 2 atmospheres IIRC. Our Dutch partners were lovely and talented people. Geoff S

Reply to  sherro01
June 15, 2026 10:39 am

Geoff,
That was AkzoNobel, the group I was working for at that time: the salt mining was around Hengelo, where they found an underground salt “mountain” of some 1200 m thick… Salt was extracted by underground dissolving with water.
Chlorine factories were in Hengelo, Delfzijl and Rotterdam, where I worked. Liquid chlorine was distributed to different bussinesses in Rotterdam by pipeline, most was to the on-site VCM/PVC factory in joint venture with Shell, which delivered the ethylene for PVC…
Big bussiness: 325,000 tpa chlorine, 500,000 tpa VCM/PVC and a continuous use of some 132 MW of power for the electrolysers…

June 14, 2026 6:58 am

There are other organizations that pretend to help the environment and people. Others such as Friends of the Earth, the Sierra Club, and Healthy Gulf still oppose the Yazoo Backwater Pumps Project. The 2019 South Delta flood submerged 548,000 acres for approximately 150 consecutive days, including 231,000 acres of farmland that could not be planted. 

 The disaster resulted in an estimated $800 million in damage, caused 686 homes to be swamped, submerged three highways, and led to multiple deaths. Almost all of these were minorities living in the lower Delta.  

Friends of the Earth visited after the 2019 flood but not the Sierra Club or Health Gulf.

Cypress and Magnolia trees died from 150 day of stagnant water. An entire generation of white-tailed deer, feral hogs, snakes, fish, and various small mammals were lost as well.

So these organizations are not friend of Mississippi but can raise funds by opposing the pump(s). The water that does not evaporate will end up in the Mississippi River anyway.

Greg61
June 14, 2026 10:41 am

There are useful idiots who fund these organizations, but I suspect the main funders have been the USSR, now Russia, and the CCP. What better way to undermine your enemy?

observa
June 15, 2026 1:14 am

Stuff the science hug the trees and feelgood-
The Forest that threw men out: A myth based on a lie