From London to HK: Classrooms will empty around the world for the #ClimateStrike march inspired by Greta Thunberg

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On March 15, classrooms are set to empty in cities across the globe, from Boston to Bogota, Montreal to Melbourne, Dhaka to Durban, Lagos to London

Young Post Reporter |
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Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg (C) takes part in a demonstration of students calling for climate protection on March 1, 2019 in front of the cityhall in Hambourg, Germany.

It began with a solitary, 15-year-old girl camped out in front of Sweden’s parliament next to a hand-written sign: “SCHOOL STRIKE FOR CLIMATE”.

Barely six months later, Friday’s youth-led strike – promising 1,000 actions spread over 100 countries – could be a “milestone moment” in a grassroots campaign to goad world leaders into confronting the threat of global warming, activists and experts say.

“We are only seeing the beginning,” tweeted Greta Thunberg, who has since turned 16.

HK teens inspired by environmental activist Greta Thunberg urge fellow students to join their school strike for climate action

“I think that change is on the horizon and the people will stand up for their future.”

So far, the weekly walk-outs have seen tens of thousands of mostly high school students spill out into the streets in Germany, Belgium, Britain and France, with a smattering of actions in half-a-dozen other countries.

Greta Thunberg holds a placard bearing the number of signatures of a petition to support her during a demonstration of students calling for climate protection on March 1, 2019 in front of the cityhall in Hambourg, Germany
Photo: AFP

But on March 15, classrooms are set to empty in cities across the globe, from Boston to Bogota, Montreal to Melbourne, Dhaka to Durban, Lagos to London. Some local and national leaders have tried to cajole or threaten students, but such efforts have mostly backfired.

In Australia, when New South Wales Education Minister Rob Stokes said those ditching classes would be punished, Greta – as she is known to all – responded in a tweet: “We hear you, and we don’t care. Your statement belongs in a museum.”

Swedish teen climate activist Greta Thunberg tells Davos elites they need to do whatever it takes to meet the Paris Agreement

Climate change impacts vary from one region to the next, but teens everywhere confronted with a climate-addled future have decided where to direct their ire.

“Dear adults, use your power!”, has become an unofficial slogan for the #FridaysForFuture movement.

Wake-up call

In France, the message scrawled on posters in the street is more pointed: “In 2050 you will be dead, not us.” The crescendo of impatience expressed by youth toward their elders is not hard to understand.

Despite 30 years of warnings about dire impacts, carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions hit record levels in 2017 and again last year. Loading the atmosphere with greenhouse gases at current rates, scientists agree, will eventually lead to an unliveable hothouse planet.

Students take part in a march for the environment, in Brussels, on February 21, 2019.
Photo: AFP

The problem, in other words, continues to outstrip efforts to rein it in.

“On climate change, we have to acknowledge that we have failed,” Greta, an invited speaker, told the global ruling class in Davos in January.

The 2015 Paris climate treaty calls for capping global warming at “well below” two degrees Celsius.

After COP24 UN, this youth activist asks governments when they will actually take action against climate change

The planet is currently on track to heat up by at least 4C.

In an electro-shock report published in October, the UN’s climate science panel (IPCC) said only a wholesale transformation of the global economy and consumer habits could forestall climate catastrophe.

“That was definitely a wake-up call for us,” said Stephen O’Hanlon, spokesman for the youth-led Sunrise Movement in the United States, where schools strikes and protests are expected in dozens of cities and towns.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker greeting 16-year old Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg at a conference in Brussels
Photo: Reuters

On Wednesday, mayors of eight major cities – including Paris, Sydney, Barcelona and Philadelphia – offered explicit backing of student demands for urgent action, and tacit acceptance of their one-day truancy.

“It is an injustice that young people who have contributed the least to climate change will feel the brunt of its effects,” said the mayor of Sydney, Clover Moore.

Tomorrow's voters

“We are the last generation to have a realistic chance to prevent a climate catastrophe,” said Global Strike for the Future spokesperson Linus Steinmetz. “If adults won’t comply with the rules, we won’t either.” 

Young people have also sued governments in Europe and the US for failing to adopt policies that protect citizens from stronger storms, heatwaves and flooding that scientists say are already underway.

Students at this school are doing their part for the environment by pushing for solar panels to power the buildings

“Change always happens when ordinary people take extraordinary actions – this is one of those moments,” said Nicolas Haeringer, global organiser for 350.org, a grassroots climate NGO founded in 2007.

“This next global strike will be a milestone in world history, a moment when adults will learn to follow the lead of children.”

Experts on social movements were more measured but agreed that the world is seeing something new.

The 16-year-old climate activist delivers a speech during a meeting at the Civil Society For rEUnaissance at the EU Charlemagne Building in Brussels on February 21, 2018.
Photo: AFP

“What has impressed me is how qualitatively different the recent upsurge in grassroots activism feels -- not just in volume, but in the radical form it’s taking,” said Doug McAdams, a professor of sociology at Stanford University who recently wrote a study to explain the lack of climate change activism in the United States.

Global warming, he now predicts, will emerge as a key issue in the 2020 presidential and congressional elections. “The fact that this is led by the younger generations changes the political landscape,” said Sebastien Treyer, director general of the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations in Paris.

“They are tomorrow’s voters.”

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