Another two years lost to climate inaction, says
Greta Thunberg
Two years on from her first school strike, activist
attacks ‘ignorance and unawareness’
Greta Thunberg: the world is still in a state of
climate crisis denial
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Wed 19 Aug
2020 06.00 BSTLast modified on Wed 19 Aug 2020 12.48 BST
Two years
on from Greta Thunberg’s first solo school strike for the climate, she says the
world has wasted the time by failing to take the necessary action on the
crisis.
Thunberg’s
strike inspired a global movement, and on Thursday she and other leading school
strikers will meet Angela Merkel, the chancellor of Germany, which holds the
rotating presidency of the European council. They will demand a halt to all
fossil fuel investments and subsidies and the establishment of annual, binding
carbon budgets based on the best science.
“Looking
back [over two years], a lot has happened. Many millions have taken to the
streets … and on 28 November 2019, the European parliament declared a climate
and environmental emergency,” Thunberg said in an article for the Guardian with
fellow strikers Luisa Neubauer, Anuna de Wever and Adélaïde Charlier.
“But over
these last two years, the world has also emitted over 80bn tonnes of CO2. We
have seen continuous natural disasters taking place across the globe. Many
lives and livelihoods have been lost, and this is only the very beginning.”
They said
leaders were speaking of an “existential crisis”, yet “when it comes to action,
we are still in a state of denial. The gap between what we need to do and
what’s actually being done is widening by the minute. Effectively, we have lost
another two crucial years to political inaction.”
Thunberg
and her colleagues said fighting the climate emergency must involve rich
nations stopping some of their polluting activities. “However, it’s a fact
which most people refuse to accept. Just the thought of being in a crisis that
we cannot buy, build or invest our way out of seems to create some kind of
collective mental short-circuit. This mix of ignorance, denial and unawareness
is the very heart of the problem,” they said.
The trillions of dollars being spent by governments in
response to the coronavirus pandemic are seen as a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to put the world on course to halt global heating, with economists,
scientists and health experts all saying the benefits would outweigh the costs.
However,
G20 governments’ rescue packages are giving significantly more support to
fossil fuels than to low-carbon energy. Germany’s recovery plan includes €40bn
for climate measures such as electric vehicles, public transport and energy
efficiency, and has been praised by green groups. But elsewhere, too little is
being done, Thunberg and colleagues said.
“Even a
child can see that the policies of today are incompatible with the current best
available science,” they said.
Scientists
calculate that global carbon emissions must be cut by half by the end of this
decade if humanity is to have a reasonable chance of keeping temperature rises
to below 1.5C, the limit set in the Paris climate deal. Drops in emissions
during coronavirus lockdowns are only a small blip in a long-term rising trend
and will have a “negligible” effect on the climate crisis, researchers say.
“We
understand the world is complicated and that what we are asking for may not be
easy or seem unrealistic,” said the school strikers. “But it is much more
unrealistic to believe that our societies would be able to survive the global
heating we’re heading for. We are inevitably going to have to fundamentally
change, one way or another. The question is: will the changes be on our terms,
or on nature’s terms?”

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