Greta Thunberg’s climate movement targets Angela
Merkel
Climate strikers are planning for a wave of
demonstrations next month.
By KALINA
OROSCHAKOFF 8/20/20, 6:19 PM CET Updated 8/21/20, 7:38 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/greta-thunberg-climate-youth-movement-targets-angela-merkel/
The
pandemic has hobbled the weekly student protests that made Greta Thunberg and
other campaigners a global phenomenon — so they're now hitting up politicians
in person.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel got a firsthand taste of that on Thursday, when
Thunberg and three other youth activists met with her for 90 minutes to press
for more aggressive German leadership on climate change. Campaigners like
Thunberg have met top politicians in the past — but now it's their main venue
for staying in the public eye.
"We
went to Angela Merkel because we wrote an open letter to all heads of states
and world leaders, we had a few demands in there. The thing we mostly ask for
is that we want leaders in this crisis, and we don’t have any leaders right now
that treat this crisis as a crisis," Belgium's Anuna De Wever, 19, told
reporters after meeting with Merkel.
According
to a German government statement issued after the meeting, the group discussed
the climate priorities of the German EU Council presidency, the EU's objective
of becoming climate-neutral by 2050 and efforts to hike the bloc's 2030
emissions reduction targets.
"Both
sides agree that global warming is a global challenge where industrial states
have a particular responsibility in its management," the statement said,
adding: "The basis for that is the implementation of the Paris
Agreement."
"We want leaders to step up, take responsibility
and treat the climate crisis like a crisis" — Climate activist Greta
Thunberg
But that's
pretty much where agreement ended.
The
campaigners want politicians — and especially Merkel — to speed up emissions
cuts and other climate measures. They say that “Europe has a responsibility to
act” thanks to the pollution dating back to the Industrial Revolution that
caused the bulk of the emissions problem.
"We
want leaders to step up, take responsibility and treat the climate crisis like
a crisis," said Thunberg.
But many
politicians argue they can't simply rush through tougher climate targets
without also taking into effect the impact on people and businesses.
The
campaigners give short shrift to such political calculations.
"It
became very clear that we look at the situation from different
perspectives," Luisa Neubauer, 24, the group's German member, told
reporters. "As a physicist, [Merkel] does understand the science. As a
politician, she well understands the political complexity behind that struggle.
The question is now how to fill that gap."
For them,
the rapidly warming planet is the world's overriding risk.
"The
interests of future generations have to be somehow balanced with interests of
generations today — and that’s a huge challenge and we’re not denying that at
all," said Neubauer, a member of the German Greens party.
While the
weekly strikes that launched the youth protest movement are now more difficult,
the movement isn't giving up on direct action.
"We
used to strike in masses on the streets which was for many weeks not thinkable
during corona and is still a very challenging task," Neubauer said.
"We're listening to the science and we are adjusting. We're moving to
spaces where we can strike safely — sometimes digitally, sometimes in smaller
numbers on the streets."
The
movement is gearing up for a new wave of demonstrations next month.
"We
have decided to strike again globally and safely, if possible on the streets …
we're mobilizing right now for September 25," Neubauer said. "The
climate crisis hasn't slowed, it's escalating. We need people to demand action
and this is obviously what we keep doing."
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