‘We need everyone’: Greta Thunberg calls on adults to join
climate strikes
Global general strike on 20 September could be historic
turning point, say activists
Read the call to action by Greta Thunberg and other youth
climate strikers
Damian Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Thu 23 May 2019 17.42 BST First published on Thu 23 May 2019
16.45 BST
Greta Thunberg and leading youth strikers for climate action
from across the world have called for all adults to join a global general
strike on 20 September.
They are asking citizens to walk out of work just before a
crucial UN summit at which nations are being urged to declare much stronger
ambitions to tackle the climate emergency.
The call was issued as young people prepared for what
organisers have claimed will be one of the biggest student strikes so far on
Friday, with protests expected in 1,594 cities and towns in 118 countries,
according to the Fridays for the Future website.
Thunberg, the Swedish teenager who sparked the global
movement with a solo protest last August, and 44 fellow protesters from across
the globe, issued the call for a general strike in an article in the Guardian.
“We’re asking adults to step up alongside us … today, so
many of our parents are busy discussing whether our grades are good, or a new
diet or the Game of Thrones finale – whilst the planet burns,” they write. “But
to change everything, we need everyone. It is time for all of us to unleash
mass resistance … if we [demand change] in numbers we have a chance.”
The global strike is intended to start a week of climate
action around the world.
“We’re asking adults to step up alongside us,” the youth
strikers write. “Step out of your comfort zone to make this a turning point in
our history. This is about crossing lines – it’s about rebelling wherever one
can rebel.”
The youth protesters are demanding that governments
immediately provide a safe pathway to stay below a maximum temperature rise of
1.5C. The world’s scientists say sharp cuts in carbon emissions are urgently
needed to deliver a 50% fall by 2030 and avoid worse droughts, floods, extreme
heatwaves and poverty for hundreds of millions of people. However, emissions
are still rising.
Wildlife is also being annihilated by human activity, with
animal populations having fallen by an average of 60% since 1970. Human society
is threatened by the decline of natural life-support systems, according to
another landmark report published earlier in May, with half of natural
ecosystems now destroyed and a million species at risk of extinction.
Some adults have already joined the youth strikes, with
thousands of workers protesting across Belgium in March, along with a
delegation from the European Federation of Public Service Unions. Some parents
have also mounted protests in the UK and across Europe.
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