School students go on strike to fight climate change
School students in Australia and New Zealand have gone on strike, marking the start of a worldwide day of climate change protests
Friday, 24th May 2019
School students in Australia and New Zealand have gone on strike, marking the start of a worldwide day of climate change protests.
Coordinators expect more than a million young people to join protests in at least 110 countries, inspired by 16-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg’s demand for urgent action to slow global warming.
The protesters are calling for politicians and businesses to take action to fight climate change.
Carrying a "school strike for climate change" sign, the then 15-year old Thunberg said she was refusing to attend classes until Swedish politicians took action.
Her example inspired various movements across Europe, the US and Australia, known as Fridays For Future or School Strike for Climate.
The last co-ordinated international protest took place on 15 March, with an estimated 1.6 million students from 125 countries walking out of school.
This Friday's protests started in Australia and New Zealand, and are expected to be picked up across Asia, Europe, Africa and the Americas.
“I’m worried about all the weather disasters. Everytime we have huge a bushfire here another animal might go extinct,” said Nina Pasqualini, a 13-year-old at a rally in Melbourne, led by the group Extinction Rebellion.
“The government isn’t doing as much as it should. It’s just scary for younger generations,” she said, holding up a placard seeking to stop a proposed new coal mine in Australia.
Australia just had its hottest summer on record and climate change is seen as the cause of the increasing frequency and severity of droughts, heat waves, floods and the melting of glaciers around the world.
In 2018, global carbon emissions hit a record high and UN-backed panel on climate change last October warned that to stabilize the climate, emissions will have to be slashed over the next 12 years.
Earlier this month, a UN report warned that one million animal and plant species were now threatened with extinction.
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