The Daily Telegraph

No one listened to us and Trump was horrible, says Thunberg

- By Russell Lynch in Davos

CLIMATE activist Greta Thunberg has called her treatment by Donald Trump “horrible” and accused the business elite of ignoring campaigner­s’ demands at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos.

The 17-year-old – who joined dozens of other climate campaigner­s at a protest in the centre of the skiing resort on the final day of the meeting – has called for an immediate end to investment in fossil fuels in several appearance­s here this week.

But she has also drawn the ire of Donald Trump, the US president, who hit out at “prophets of doom” in his own speech to delegates, while White House treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin said Ms Thunberg should “go and study economics”.

She said: “Before we came here, we had a few demands for this WEF and of course these demands have been completely ignored, but we expected that.”

She said her clashes with Trump were “horrible”.

But she added: “We can’t care about those types of things.

“If we put ourselves in the spotlight – and we know that people don’t understand the situation, it is not being treated as the crisis – then people will criticise us, as we are the ones who are telling this, and no one else is telling this.”

Ms Thunberg refused to say whether the carbon impact of almost 3,000 delegates flying to Davos from all over the world was worth it.

She said: “We just took this opportunit­y to be here, where many world and business leaders are gathered.”

But Ms Thunberg and other campaigner­s who joined her for a panel discussion have not held any talks with the bosses of major oil firms in Davos this week.

The head of the world’s biggest oil producer, Saudi Aramco chief executive Amin Nasser, told a WEF panel that those calling for a cut in fossil fuel investment were oversimpli­fying the situation.

He said: “There is a simplistic view that this is something that can happen overnight, and we can move to renewables and electrific­ation in no time, and the world will be much better and there will be zero emissions.

“Investment takes time – it takes five to seven years to build a project to make sure ample energy is available, because if it is not, affordabil­ity is an issue, and it will have serious implicatio­ns for developed countries.”

Meanwhile, in a separate panel discussion, Mr Mnuchin called for China and India to do more on what he said should be described as “environmen­tal issues, not climate change”.

He insisted that changes in temperatur­e are impossible to model with any certainty over 30 years.

Mr Mnuchin said: “If you want to put a tax on people, go ahead and put a carbon tax. That is a tax on hardworkin­g people.”

 ??  ?? Greta Thunberg, standing centre in scarf, with other young environmen­tal campaigner­s at a demonstrat­ion in the heart of Davos
Greta Thunberg, standing centre in scarf, with other young environmen­tal campaigner­s at a demonstrat­ion in the heart of Davos

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