The 16-year-old’s lone protest last summer has morphed into
a powerful global movement challenging politicians to act
Jonathan Watts
@jonathanwatts
Fri 15 Feb 2019 06.00 GMT Last modified on Fri 15 Feb 2019
19.56 GMT
Greta Thunberg is hopeful the student climate strike on
Friday can bring about positive change, as young people in more and more
countries join the protest movement she started last summer as a lone
campaigner outside the Swedish parliament.
The 16-year-old welcomed the huge mobilisation planned in
the UK, which follows demonstrations by tens of thousands of school and
university students in Australia, Belgium, Germany, the United States, Japan
and more than a dozen other countries.
“I think it’s great that England is joining the school
strike in a major way this week. There has been a number of real heroes on
school strike, for instance in Scotland and Ireland, for some time now. Such as
Holly Gillibrand and the ones in Cork with the epic sign saying ‘the emperor is
naked’,” she told the Guardian.
With an even bigger global mobilisation planned for 15
March, she feels the momentum is now building.
“I think enough people have realised just how absurd the
situation is. We are in the middle of the biggest crisis in human history and
basically nothing is being done to prevent it. I think what we are seeing is
the beginning of great changes and that is very hopeful,” she wrote.
Thunberg has risen rapidly in prominence and influence. In
December, she spoke at the United Nations climate conference, berating world
leaders for behaving like irresponsible children.
Last month, she had similarly harsh words for the global
business elite at Davos. She said: “Some people, some companies, some
decision-makers in particular, have known exactly what priceless values they
have been sacrificing to continue making unimaginable amounts of money. And I
think many of you here today belong to that group of people.”
The movement she started has morphed and grown around the
world , and, at times, linked up with older groups, including Extinction
Rebellion, 350.org and Greenpeace.
Next week she will take the train – having decided not to
fly due to the high carbon emissions of aviation – to speak at an event
alongside Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European commission, in
Brussels, and then on to Paris to join the school strikes now expanding in
France.
Veteran climate campaigners are astonished by what has been
achieved in such a short time. “The movement that Greta launched is one of the
most hopeful things in my 30 years of working on the climate question. It
throws the generational challenge of global warming into its sharpest relief,
and challenges adults to prove they are, actually, adults. So many thanks to
all the young people who are stepping up,” said Bill McKibben, the founder of
350.org.
Around the world, so many student strikes are now taking
place or planned that it is becoming hard to keep up. On Twitter, a supporter
who posts under the name The Dormouse That Roared, has compiled a Google map that
pins all the reported or announced locations, stretching from Abuja and
Bugoloobi to Sacramento and Medellín. “This is not perfect by any means. It’s
an emergency after all,” the online campaigner told the Guardian.
The most recent version shows thick clusters of activity,
particularly in the UK and northern Europe. “#climatestrike. The house is on
fire. Just wow!” wrote @dormouseroared, who is also collecting the different
terms for “climate strike” in different languages.
In reply, people on Twitter have written, “I’ve been
dreaming of this”, “Power to the children”, “beautiful” and simply “hope”.
Australia was one of the first countries to mobilise. Last
November, organisers estimate 15,000 students went on strike. Last Friday,
students lobbied outside the offices of the opposition party. On 1 March, they
will target the federal treasurer’s office. Two weeks later, they will join the
global strike.
They are demanding
immediate political action to stop the Adani coalmine in Queensland, and a
switch from fossil fuels to 100% renewable energy.
On Thursday, three student activists from Castlemaine in
Australia – Callum Bridgefoot, 11; Harriet O’Shea Carre, 14 and Milou
Albrechy,14 – spoke with the leader of the opposition in the federal
parliament. “It’s a good sign that he is willing to meet,” they said. “The
prime minister condemned the strike.”
The resources minister Matt Canavan was still more hostile,
saying students would be better off learning about mining and science. “These
are the type of things that excite young children and we should be great at it
as a nation,” he told a local radio station. “The best thing you’ll learn about
going to a protest is how to join the dole queue.”
In Belgium, there have been strikes by thousands of students
for at least four consecutive weeks, with one now-famous placard – addressed to
politicians and policymakers – reading: “I’ll do my homework when you do
yours.”
More than 3,000 scientists have given their backing to the
strikes. The Belgian government is clearly feeling the pressure. The environment
minister was forced to resign after falsely claiming the country’s intelligence
services held evidence that the striking children were being directed by
unnamed powers. The allegation was quickly contradicted by intelligence chiefs.
Switzerland has seen some of the biggest actions. Local
activists said 23,000 joined the strike on 18 January, followed by 65,000 on 2
February. They too are preparing for the global demonstration on 15 March. They
want the government to immediately declare a climate state of emergency,
implement policies to be zero-carbon by 2030 without geo-engineering, and if
necessary move away from the current economic system.
Activists said they want to make clear that the problem is
systematic rather than a matter of individual lifestyle choices. They have been
criticised by right-wing politicians, but local governments have met student
delegations to discuss short-term steps, such as a ban on any school trip that
involves a flight. One regional authority has declared its support for the
student movement. In an election year, state leaders have also expressed
guarded support.
“For the moment, the government has reacted in a very
paternalistic way. They say that it’s a good sign that the youth is
demonstrating for its future but they don’t really do anything about it,” said
Thomas Bruchez, a 20-year-old student at the University of Geneva. In two
weeks, he said the organisers will prepare for the next nationwide strike, when
they will consider how to involve workers and try to define more precise
claims, such as free public transport financed by highly progressive taxes.
In Germany, activists told the Guardian there are
mobilisations every week. Last Friday, there were 20,000 students striking in
50 cities. On 18 January, there were 30,000. And there will be another strike
this Friday in at least 30 cities.
The global strike on 15 March is expected to be the biggest
yet with mobilisations in 150 cities. “It is not acceptable that grown-ups are
destroying the future right now,” said Jakob Blasel, a high-school student.
“Our goal to stop coal power in Germany and fossil energy everywhere.” He said
politicians have expressed admiration for their campaign, but this has not
translated into action. “This is not acceptable. We won’t stop until they start
acting.”
Until now 75% of the participants have been schoolchildren
but increasing numbers of university students are joining. Luisa Neubauer, a
22-year-old, was among those invited to talk to senior cabinet officials. She
told the German minister of economy that he was part of the problem because he
was working for industry, rather than for people or the planet.
“What we need our politicians and our government to
understand is that everything they do today comes at a price for future
generations,” she said. “We are not doing this for fun, but because we don’t
have a choice.”
But she too noted a new direction in the national
discussion. “There is a debate now about climate and the environment, which is
good. People for the first time in years are not talking about refugees but
talking about the environment.”
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