Show Navigation

J.B. Russell Images

  • Portfolio
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

J.B. Russell Images

Search Results

10 images

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)

Loading ()...

  • Men fill jerrycans with feul near a destroyed bridge while residents wait to be ferried across the Siverskyi Donets River in rowboats following the liberation of the area Ukraine’s counter-offensive. Staryi Saltiv, Ukraine. 07/10/2022.
    _DSC7938.jpg
  • A feul depot for the gas station chain Marshall that was bombed and occupied by the Russian Army and then bombed again by the Ukrainian military to regain the area. Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine. 08/10/2022.
    _DSC8634.jpg
  • Gasoline being sold along the street of Erbil. Iraqi Kurdistan is dependent on gasoline from the regime in Baghdad, but has also rebuilt it's society on revenue from the oil for food program and taxing crude oil exported from Iraq, through Kurdistan, to Turkey...Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan. 13/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-027.jpg
  • A feul depot for the gas station chain Marshall that was bombed and occupied by the Russian Army and then bombed again by the Ukrainian military to regain the area. Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine. 08/10/2022.
    _DSC8621.jpg
  • Gasoline being sold along the roadside in the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan. Although the Kurds enjoy a certain autonomy, they are cut off from the rest of the world and are at the mercy of Saddam's regime for their energy needs...Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan. 14/11/2002..Photo © J.B. Russell..
    iraqkurds-010.jpg
  • The villagers of Diagho harvest palm nuts in the forest for the artisinale production of palm oil, palm wine and palm oil based soaps. Palm oil products from Casamance are well known and are an important part of the local economy. During the dry season, the men harvest the fruit and the sap of wild palm trees and the women transform the palm nuts into local products. Palm oil production in Casamance remains traditional and has resisted the transformation to industrial scale plantations to satisfy the growing demand from the international food and bio fuel industries that have resulted in large scale deforestation in SE Asia and Latin America. Diagho, Senegal. 10/11/2014.
    WestAfricaClimateChange_056.jpg
  • The villagers of Diagho harvest palm nuts in the forest for the artisinale production of palm oil, palm wine and palm oil based soaps. Palm oil products from Casamance are well known and are an important part of the local economy. During the dry season, the men harvest the fruit and the sap of wild palm trees and the women transform the palm nuts into local products. Palm oil production in Casamance remains traditional and has resisted the transformation to industrial scale plantations to satisfy the growing demand from the international food and bio fuel industries that have resulted in large scale deforestation in SE Asia and Latin America. Diagho, Senegal. 10/11/2014.
    WestAfricaClimateChange_057.jpg
  • A woman produces and sells Carousse oil in a rural village. Palm oil production in the region remains traditional and has resisted the transformation to industrial scale plantations to satisfy the growing demand from the international food and bio fuel industries that have resulted in large scale deforestation in SE Asia and Latin America. There is also increasing pressure to cut productive trees for the sale of their truncks, a practice that degrades the forest. If the commercialization of traditional, sustainably produced palm oil products could generate more revenue than the cutting of trees for wood, communities could improve their economic and living standards while protecting the natural resources of their environment.  Birban, Guinea Bissau. 13/11/2014.
    WestAfricaClimateChange_060.jpg
  • Benzene, kerosene, diesol, RCR (residual) and natural gas flow from Iraqi Kurdistan's only oil refinery. After the 1991 uprising against the Baghdad regime, Saddam Hussein refused to provide petroleum to the Kurds, so they began to develop their own small oil fields. Deprived of parts and technology, Kurdish engineers recovered the necessary elements from abandoned factories and constructed Kurdistan's only oil refinery at a disused sugar factory. Production provides 20% of Iraqi Kurdistans fuel needs. 30% comes once again from the regime and the rest is obtained through black market smuggling...Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan. 21/11/2002...Photo © J.B. Russell
    kurd-077.jpg
  • Muthana Salih lost his leg to US bullets on April 28th when US soldiers fired on demonstrators in front of a school where the soldiers where based. 18 Iraqis where killed and more than 80 wounded. The Iraqis say the incident was unprovoked. The Americans say they were fired upon first. The killings have fueled serious anti-American sentiment in the town..Falluja, Iraq. 06 June 2003..Photo © J.B. Russell
    falluja-005.jpg