Jiri Rezac Photography

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  • CZECH REPUBLIC BOHEMIA ZDECHLICE JAN01 - Steam emissions from the cooling towers of the coal-fuelled power plant Zdechlice in central Bohemia. ..jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2001..Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Email: jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ01-001.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 - Steam engine built in 1908 rolls through Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-531.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 - Steam engine built in 1908 rolls through Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-528.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 - Steam engine built in 1908 rolls through Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-532.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 - Steam engine built in 1908 rolls through Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-530.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 - Steam engine built in 1908 rolls through Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-529.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 - Steam engine built in 1908 rolls through Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-527.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site steam pipelines in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-245.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Suncor Firebag Sag-D steam pipelines  in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-243.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site steam pipelines in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-244.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of clearcuts near the Syncrude mining operation and tailings pond in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-250.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Suncor Firebag Sag-D tarsands operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-241.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Suncor Firebag Sag-D tarsands operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-240.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Husky Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-238.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-232.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Imperial Sag-D operation, majority owned by Exxon in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-227.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of CNRL (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) Sag-D operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-225.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-011.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-004.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-002.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of well pads and seismic lines in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-251.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 -  Shopfront in Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-533.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of well pads and seismic lines in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-242.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Husky Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-239.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Husky Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-237.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-236.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-235.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-233.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-230.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-229.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-231.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Imperial Sag-D operation, majority owned by Exxon in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-228.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of Imperial Sag-D operation, majority owned by Exxon in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-226.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of CNRL (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) Sag-D operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-223.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of CNRL (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) Sag-D operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-224.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of CNRL (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) Sag-D operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-222.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of CNRL (Canadian Natural Resources Limited) Sag-D operations in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-221.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-008.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-014.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-012.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-007.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-010.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-009.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-006.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-005.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-003.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of a section of the Boreal forest destined for tarsands mining north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-254.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of a wetlands destined for tarsands mining in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-255.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of seismic lines in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-252.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of a wetlands destined for tarsands mining in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-253.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of clearcuts and seismic lines in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-246.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of clearcuts in preparation for the Imperial tarsands operation in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-247.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of clearcuts in preparation for the Imperial tarsands operation in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-248.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of clearcuts in preparation for the Imperial tarsands operation in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada...The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world...The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE..© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-249.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 -  Shopfront in Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-535.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 -  Shopfront in Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-534.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA ALSTON 31MAY06 -  Shopfront of Alston Clock Shop in Alston...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-526.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 20JUL09 - Aerial view of PetroCanada Sag-D site in the Boreal forest north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
<br />
The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-234.jpg
  • GERMANY GREVENBROICH NEURATH 3NOV19 - View of the lignite-fired RWE power station Neurath near Grevenbroich, Germany.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2019
    DE19-013.jpg
  • CZECH REPUBLIC SOUTHERN BOHEMIA JINDRICHUV HRADEC JUL00 - Journey in the historic narrow-gauge steam-train travelling from Jindrichuv Hradec to Bystrice and back. The steam train has been caringly restored and now serves as a tourist attraction during the summer.. . jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac. . © Jiri Rezac 2000. . Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417. Email: jiri@jirirezac.com. Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ00-088.jpg
  • CZECH REPUBLIC SOUTHERN BOHEMIA JINDRICHUV HRADEC JUL00 - Journey in the historic narrow-gauge steam-train travelling from Jindrichuv Hradec to Bystrice and back. The steam train has been caringly restored and now serves as a tourist attraction during the summer.. . jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac. . © Jiri Rezac 2000. . Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417. Email: jiri@jirirezac.com. Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ00-087.jpg
  • CZECH REPUBLIC SOUTHERN BOHEMIA JINDRICHUV HRADEC JUL00 - Journey in the historic narrow-gauge steam-train travelling from Jindrichuv Hradec to Bystrice and back. The steam train has been caringly restored and now serves as a tourist attraction during the summer.. . jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac. . © Jiri Rezac 2000. . Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417. Email: jiri@jirirezac.com. Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ00-086.jpg
  • CZECH REPUBLIC SOUTHERN BOHEMIA JINDRICHUV HRADEC JUL00 - Journey in the historic narrow-gauge steam-train travelling from Jindrichuv Hradec to Bystrice and back. The steam train has been caringly restored and now serves as a tourist attraction during the summer.. . jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac. . © Jiri Rezac 2000. . Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417. Email: jiri@jirirezac.com. Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ00-089.jpg
  • CZECH REPUBLIC SOUTHERN BOHEMIA JINDRICHUV HRADEC JUL00 - Journey in the historic narrow-gauge steam-train travelling from Jindrichuv Hradec to Bystrice and back. The steam train has been caringly restored and now serves as a tourist attraction during the summer.. . jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac. . © Jiri Rezac 2000. . Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417. Email: jiri@jirirezac.com. Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ00-090.jpg
  • CZECH REPUBLIC SOUTHERN BOHEMIA JINDRICHUV HRADEC JUL00 - Journey in the historic narrow-gauge steam-train travelling from Jindrichuv Hradec to Bystrice and back. The steam train has been caringly restored and now serves as a tourist attraction during the summer.. . jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac. . © Jiri Rezac 2000. . Tel:   +44 (0) 7050 110 417. Email: jiri@jirirezac.com. Web:   www.jirirezac.com
    CZ00-091.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - General view of tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1021.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - General view of tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1020.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1017.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1013.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1014.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1006.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1005.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - General view of tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1019.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - General view of tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1018.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1016.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1015.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1010.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1012.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1011.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1009.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1007.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1008.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1003.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND WALES LLANERFYL 1JUL15 - Crayfish sampling by volunteers in a tributary steam to the Banwy river near Llanerfyl, Wales, in the river Severn catchment area.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2015
    GB15-1004.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 23JUL09 - Steam rises from the toxic tailings at the Shell Albian sands tailings pond and tarsands mining operations north of Fort McMurray, northern Alberta, Canada.<br />
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The tar sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres of sparsely populated boreal forest and muskeg and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum. Current projections state that production will  grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m³/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m³/d) in 2020 which would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world.<br />
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The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
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jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / GREENPEACE<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2009
    CA09-305.jpg
  • CANADA ALBERTA FORT MCMURRAY 10MAY07 - Aerial view of Firebag SAG-D in-situ site steam pipelines operated by Suncor north of Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. The Alberta Tar Sands are the largest deposits of their kind in the world and their production is the single largest contributor to Canada's greenhouse gas emissions.<br />
<br />
Alberta's tar sands are currently estimated to contain a crude bitumen resource of 315 billion barrels, with remaining established reserves of almost 174 billion barrels, thus making Canada's oil resources ranked second largest in the world in terms of size.<br />
<br />
The industry has brought wealth and an economic boom to the region but also created an environmental disaster downstream from the Athabasca river, polluting the lakes where water and fish are contaminated. The native Indian tribes of the Mikisew, Cree, Dene and other smaller First Nations are seeing their natural habitat destroyed and are largely powerless to stop or slow down the rapid expansion of the oil sands development, Canada's number one economic driver.<br />
<br />
jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac / WWF-UK<br />
<br />
© Jiri Rezac 2007<br />
<br />
Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417<br />
Mobile: +44 (0) 7801 337 683<br />
Office: +44 (0) 20 8968 9635<br />
<br />
Email: jiri@jirirezac.com<br />
Web: www.jirirezac.com<br />
<br />
© All images Jiri Rezac 2007 - All rights reserved.
    CA07-085.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 - Farm animals graze in close proximity to BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-428.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-425.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-424.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-423.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-422.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-421.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-420.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-419.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-418.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-416.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-411.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-410.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-409.jpg
  • UK ENGLAND CUMBRIA SELLAFIELD 1JUN06 -General view of  BNFL's Selllafield Nuclear Reprocessing facility on the Irish Sea coast. The facility houses two types of nuclear installations. Firstly, four reactors located at Calder Hall together with their associated facilities are concerned with the generation of electricity and steam for consumption on the Sellafield site and feeding electricity into the National Grid. The second facility, comprising several hundred buildings is associated with the treatment and storage of radioactive wastes, and the reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel arising from the UK nuclear power programme and from overseas reactors under commercial contracts negotiated by BNFL...jre/Photo by Jiri Rezac..© Jiri Rezac 2006..Contact: +44 (0) 7050 110 417.Mobile:  +44 (0) 7801 337 683.Office:  +44 (0) 20 8968 9635..Email:   jiri@jirirezac.com.Web:    www.jirirezac.com..© All images Jiri Rezac 2006 - All rights reserved.
    GB06-406.jpg
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