Shanghai Daily

World youth demand climate action

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FRESH off the climate strike that took hundreds of thousands of young people out of classrooms and into the streets globally, youth leaders gathered at the United Nations on Saturday to demand radical moves to fight climate change.

“We showed that we are united and that we, young people, are unstoppabl­e,” Swedish 16-yearold activist Greta Thunberg, who started the climate strike movement with her lone protest in front of her country’s parliament about a year and a half ago.

Over 700 mostly young activists attended the first of its kind Youth Climate Summit, said Luis Alfonso de Alba, the UN special climate summit envoy.

Friday’s strike across six continents and Saturday’s youth conference presage a full-on climate conference this week at the UN General Assembly, which has placed the issue of climate change at front and center as world leaders gather for the annual meeting.

Activists at Saturday’s gathering demanded money for a fund to help poorer nations adapt to a warming world and provide greener energy. They also insisted that the world should wean itself quickly from coal, oil and gas that cause climate change.

“Stop the criminal contaminan­t behavior of big corporatio­ns,” said Argentine climate activist Bruno Rodriguez. “Enough is enough. We don’t want fossil fuels anymore.”

Jayathma Wickramana­yake, the UN Secretary-General’s youth envoy, called climate change “the defining issue of our time. Millions of young people all over the world are already being affected by it.”

During Thunberg’s short lifetime, for example, the Earth has already warmed 0.34 degrees Celsius.

Fiji climate activist Komal Karishma Kumar said global warming is not just taking a toll on the planet but on her generation, especially people from vulnerable places like her Pacific island nation.

“Young people from different parts of the world are living in constant fear and climate anxiety, fearing the future, the uncertaint­y of a healthy life or a life for their children at all,” Kumar said.

“I do not want our future generation­s to submerge with our sinking islands.”

After listening to Thunberg and other youth climate activists, a tie-less Secretary-General Antonio Guterres credited young people with transformi­ng him from a pessimist to an optimist in the fight against global warming.

Guterres said he sees “a change in momentum” going into today’s Climate Action Summit taking place ahead of the UN General Assembly that starts tomorrow, saying “You have started this movement. I encourage you to keep your initiative. Keep your mobilizati­on and more and more to hold my generation accountabl­e.”

(AP)

 ??  ?? Greta Thunberg
Greta Thunberg

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