The Press

Greta stranded after summit venue change

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In the centuries before powered flight, getting from California to Madrid was an arduous business, necessitat­ing a long yomp over the Rocky Mountains and the Great Plains, and then a turbulent sea voyage across the Atlantic.

Greta Thunberg has 28 days. The teenage climate activist and pioneer of ‘‘flight shame’’ has appealed for help to travel from Los Angeles to a UN climate summit in Spain without releasing so much as a wisp of unnecessar­y carbon dioxide.

In perhaps the sternest test of her conviction­s yet, she must complete the journey of at least 10,000km by rail, sail or electric car before December 2.

It will be a close-run race against time. Three months ago Thunberg, 16, sailed from Plymouth to New York on a carbonneut­ral racing yacht for the beginning of a tour of the Americas to underline the urgency of global warming. Since then she has posed for a photograph with Arnold Schwarzene­gger, given her name to a new species of beetle and scowled fixedly at the back of

Climate change activist Greta Thunberg is looking for a low-carbon way to get from California to Spain after a UN climate summit was moved from Chile to Spain unexpected­ly.

President Donald Trump’s head.

A speech at the Santiago Climate Change Conference in Chile was supposed to be the crowning glory of the trip, although her spokesman said that she had not yet worked out how she would get there. Her plans were derailed on Friday, however, when rioting against the Chilean government forced the UN to move the meeting to Madrid. Without further ado, Thunberg tore up the South American leg of her itinerary. ‘‘I’ll need some help,’’ she tweeted. ‘‘It turns out I’ve travelled half around the world, the wrong way. Now I need to find a way to cross the Atlantic in November. If anyone could help me find transport I would be so grateful.’’

If she intends to stick to her guns and avoid flying, the maritime route will be far from straightfo­rward. Her journey from Plymouth to New York took 15 days and the yacht she used, the Malizia II, has returned to Europe. The first part will be easy enough. It should not take her much more than three or four days to reach the eastern seaboard of the US in an electric car such as the one Schwarzene­gger lent her for her travels around California.

Passage across the Atlantic also tends to be easier in an easterly direction because of the prevailing trade winds. The hard part will be finding a boat and crew prepared to undertake such a long voyage at short notice.

Within hours Teresa Ribera, the acting Spanish ecology minister, offered support: ‘‘You’ve made a long journey and help all of us to raise concern, open minds and enhance action. We would love to help you to cross the Atlantic.’’ – The Times

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