The world got to know her as a 15 year old. Sitting outside
the Swedish parliament, protesting for action on climate change.
With her slogan 'school strike for the climate' Thunberg
invited her classmates to join her and skip school on Fridays to protest.
Her message went viral - and global. She repeatedly scolded
world leaders’ reactions to global warming.
Ultimately her protest inspired the 'Friday's for future'
demonstrations - which gained major traction with young people around the
world.
But the movement also hit home with a lot of older people -
people concerned that they had seen too little climate action in their
lifetimes.
Her message was clear and simple.
ln 2019 the environmental
activist sailed two weeks across the Atlantic on a zero carbon yacht to
New York to deliver a message to the UN's climate action summit. There, she
reminded the world that she was still just a child and her thoughts should be
elsewhere.
But now Thunberg is turning 18 - making her an adult in the
eyes of Swedish law. She will finally be able to vote and hold to account
politicians she accuses of passing the climate buck onto children.
She says for her nothing has changed, the world needs to
treat climate change as the true crisis it is - here and now.
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