Greta Thunberg says it’s ‘strange’ Joe Biden is
considered a climate leader
Environmental activist criticises US president for expanding
fossil fuel infrastructure
Maya Yang
Tue 28 Dec
2021 18.39 GMT
Greta
Thunberg has criticised Joe Biden for not leading the fight against the climate
crisis.
In an
interview with the Washington Post, the 18-year old Swedish environmental
activist rejected the idea that the US president is a leader on climate issues.
“It’s
strange that people think of Joe Biden as a leader for the climate when you see
what his administration is doing,” she said. “The US is actually expanding
fossil fuel infrastructure.
“Why is the
US doing that? It should not fall on us activists and teenagers who just want
to go to school to raise this awareness and to inform people that we are
actually facing an emergency.”
Asked what
she wants politicians like Biden to do, Thunberg said: “First of all, we have
to understand what is the emergency.
“We are
trying to find a solution to a crisis that we don’t understand … it’s all about
the narrative. It’s all about, what are we actually trying to solve? Is it this
emergency, or is it this emergency?”
In
November, Thunberg called the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow “a failure”,
arguing it “turned into a PR event” in which “leaders are not doing anything”
except “actively creating loopholes and shaping frameworks” in order to keep
profiting from a “destructive system”.
Speaking to
the Post, Thunberg said that a Cop26 final agreement “which is very much an
achievement” will not amount to anything unless it increases ambitions which
leaders then fulfill.
One of the
positives of Cop26, she said, was that it revealed that “under current
circumstances, within current systems, we won’t be able to solve the climate
crisis unless there is massive pressure from the outside”.
Thunberg
said global summits like Cop26 presented a “big opportunity” for public
mobilization to highlight the climate crisis.
In Glasgow,
Biden vowed that the US would “lead by example” in the fight to avoid global
heating beyond 1.5C. He made new promises to cut down on methane, a potent
greenhouse gas, and to end deforestation, drawing widespread praise.
Nonetheless,
when more than 40 countries announced a promise to end coal mining, the US was
absent from the list.
In a recent
report, the UN environment program and other researchers found that global
production of oil and gas is on track to rise over the next 20 years at a rate
that will result in double the fossil fuel production in 2030 consistent with a
1.5C rise.
The report
found that the US projects increases in oil and gas production by 17% and 12%
respectively by 2030.
The Biden
administration has approved at least 3,091 new drilling permits on public lands
at a rate of 223 permits a month, at a faster rate than the Trump
administration.
In
November, the US held the largest-ever auction of oil and gas drilling leases
in Gulf of Mexico history, offering up more than 80m acres of seabed.
Thunberg
told the Post: “What’s holding us back is that we lack the political will.
“Our goal
is to find a solution that allows us to continue life [as it is] today,” she
said. “… but the uncomfortable truth is that we have left it too late for that.
Or the world leaders have left it too late for that.
“We need to
fundamentally change our societies now. If we would have started 30 years ago,
it would have been smoother. But now it’s a different situation.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário