The Columbus Dispatch

German protests target transporta­tion policies

Rallies are part of Fridays for Future’s global strike

- Frank Jordans

BERLIN – Thousands of climate protesters, young and old, gathered Friday in Berlin and other German cities to demand tougher government action against global warming, particular­ly in curbing greenhouse gas emissions in the transporta­tion sector.

A small pro-business party that controls Germany’s Transport Ministry, the Free Democrats, has pushed back against efforts to impose a general speed limit, phase out combustion engines and massively invest in public transport.

The refusal has frustrated the party’s larger coalition partners – Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats and the environmen­talist Greens – as well as climate activists who say Germany is missing its own emissions targets.

Among them was retired Protestant pastor Reinhart Kraft, 85, who staged a one-man protest outside the Free Democrats’ headquarte­rs in the German capital with a sign reading “End the climate boycott.”

Kraft urged Scholz to put his foot down on the issue and praised the young activists. “We need pressure,” he said. “And I hope very much that the young generation doesn’t let up.”

His words were echoed by retiree Algisa Peschel, who took part in a rally near the Transport Ministry together with her husband.

“We experience­d the war when we were small children,” she said. “We know what destructio­n means. And this includes the destructio­n of nature.”

Asked about the protests Friday, a spokesman for Scholz said the German government takes its climate goals “very seriously.”

“All ministries are hard working on them,” said Wolfgang Buechner.

The protests in Germany were part of a global “climate strike” called by the group Fridays for Future, which drew inspiratio­n from Swedish activist Greta Thunberg’s protests outside the parliament in Stockholm.

Darya Sotoodeh, a spokespers­on for the group, accused Germany’s transport minister of placing too much focus on the country’s car industry, at the expense of affordable public transport. Last year the government agreed to introduce a nationwide public transit ticket costing 49 euros ($52) a month, but bus and train companies say it is not sustainabl­e without further government subsidies.

Public transit labor unions, whose members went on strike in parts of Germany on Friday to demand higher wages, expressed support for the climate protest.

“We’re standing side by side with Fridays for Future,” said Mathias Kurreck of the ver.di union, which also represents public transit workers.

A rise in global carbon emissions last year was partly blamed on a rebound in air travel as COVID restrictio­ns eased. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency also warned this week that the trend toward ever bigger cars is a growing problem for the environmen­t.

The consequenc­es of higher temperatur­es are already being felt in many parts of the planet. Italy – which also saw protests – and France warned this week that they face another year of drought after winter brought little rain and snow.

 ?? MICHAEL SOHN/AP ?? People take part in a protest in Berlin Friday, calling for more government action on climate change. Activists say Germany is missing its own emissions targets.
MICHAEL SOHN/AP People take part in a protest in Berlin Friday, calling for more government action on climate change. Activists say Germany is missing its own emissions targets.

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