Before dawn on Monday, 20 Greenpeace activists went to site of the historic Nazca lines and laid out massive yellow letters reading "Time for Change: The Future is Renewable." Currently, the United Nations is holding the Lima Climate Change Conference in the country, and the stunt was apparently intended to catch the attention of officials gathered there.
According to a press release on Greenpeace's website, the group meant for the message -- which can be seen from the sky -- "to honor the Nazca people, whose ancient geoglyphs are one of the historic landmarks of Peru. It is believed that one of the reasons for the Nazca's disappearance can be linked to massive regional climate change."
However, the government of Peru did not take it as an honor.
"It's a true slap in the face at everything Peruvians consider sacred," Deputy Culture Minister Luis Jaime Castillo told Associated Press.

Greenpeace activists arranging letters of their message next to a famous hummingbird geoglyph
"They are absolutely fragile," the minister said of the geoglyphs. "They are black rocks on a white background. You walk there and the footprint is going to last hundreds or thousands of years. And the line that they have destroyed is the most visible and most recognized of all."
















Comment: Unfortunately, the Nasca lines world heritage site is not "renewable" in the near future. Greenpeace gave a dubious apology for its unfortunate and irremovable "footprint." No matter what their original intent (which was a stunt at best), it was an unthinkable act of chutzpah and stupidity that will leave its "mark" for generations. I doubt that that was the ultimate message Greenpeace wanted to make. It will, however, be how many will think of it and Greenpeace, for a long time to come.