The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Pupils to strike again over climate change

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Pupils across Scotland will once again demand urgent action to tackle climate change in the second global school strike.

Hundreds of children took part in demonstrat­ions across the UK as part of a day of global strike action held in March.

Events were held at locations including outside the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh and at George Square in Glasgow.

Later today, pupils will take part in marches through Edinburgh and Glasgow, finishing once again at the Parliament and George Square, while protests will also be held in towns and cities across the country including Aberdeen, Fort William, Skelmorlie, Aboyne, Fort William, Peebles, Nairn, Stirling and Ullapool.

At the SNP conference last month, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon declared a “climate emergency”, noting she had been inspired by demonstrat­ing pupils.

Ms Sturgeon told her party’s conference: “They want government­s around the world to declare a climate emergency.

“They say that’s what the science tells us. And they are right.”

Earlier this month, the Scottish Government also agreed to set a target of net-zero emissions by 2045 – an aim described by experts as the “most ambitious in the world”.

It followed recommenda­tions set out by the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) that Scotland meet the target five years ahead of the UK in 2050.

The climate strikes by pupils were started in August last year by the Swedish schoolgirl Greta Thunberg and have since been mirrored across the world.

Holly Gillibrand, 13, from Fort William said: “I am too young to vote and we can’t wait for people my age to come into power.

“That’s why we need to strike to make our voices heard.”

 ??  ?? Greta Thunberg.
Greta Thunberg.

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