The Oklahoman

Thousands march for tougher climate action

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BRUSSELS – Dressed as endangered fish or tigers or wearing toy polar bears on their heads, demonstrat­ors marched through Brussels on Sunday to push world leaders to take bolder action to fight climate change at the U.N. climate summit in Glasgow starting this month.

Thousands of people and 80 organizati­ons took part in the protest, aiming for the biggest such event in the European Union’s capital since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which stopped the climate movement’s weekly marches in its tracks.

Cyclists, families with children and white-haired demonstrat­ors filled city streets, chanting slogans demanding climate justice and waving banners in English, French and Dutch. One carried a stuffed polar bear on her head, and others were dressed as animals endangered by human-caused climate change.

“After you’ve seen all the disasters we have seen this summer, it’s really crucial that we move now. Because everybody knows what the problem is,” said Xavier De Wannemaeke­r, a protester with Extinction Rebellion.

Scientists say there’s little doubt that fuel emissions are contributi­ng to extreme weather events like the droughts, fires, floods that have hit regions around the world this summer.

Demonstrat­or Lucien Dewanaga asked, “What do we do when we destroy the planet? We have nothing else. Human beings have to live in this world. And there is only one world.”

Environmen­talists worry that the U.N.’s 26th Climate Change Conference of the Parties, known as the COP26, in Glasgow, Scotland, starting Oct. 31 will produce policies that don’t do enough to slash carbon emissions and slow the warming of the planet.

The 12-day summit aims to secure more ambitious commitment­s to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius with a goal of keeping it to 1.5 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels. The event also is focused on mobilizing financing to fight climate change and protecting vulnerable communitie­s and natural habitats.

The crowd at Sunday’s protest included a mix of people with and without masks. With one of the world’s highest vaccinatio­n rates, Belgium is starting to ease virus restrictio­ns and allow such gatherings again.

 ?? GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT/AP ?? A girl holds up a sign to oncoming traffic as she participat­es in a climate march and demonstrat­ion in Brussels on Sunday.
GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT/AP A girl holds up a sign to oncoming traffic as she participat­es in a climate march and demonstrat­ion in Brussels on Sunday.

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