Students demand action on climate change in planned global school walkout

Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg demonstrates with high school students against global warming at a Fridays for Future demonstration on March 01, 2019 in Hamburg, Germany. Fridays for Future is an international movement of students who, instead of attending their classes, take part in demonstrations demanding for action against climate change. The series of demonstrations began when Thunberg staged such a protest outside the Swedish parliament building.

Credit: Adam Berry

Credit: Adam Berry

Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg demonstrates with high school students against global warming at a Fridays for Future demonstration on March 01, 2019 in Hamburg, Germany. Fridays for Future is an international movement of students who, instead of attending their classes, take part in demonstrations demanding for action against climate change. The series of demonstrations began when Thunberg staged such a protest outside the Swedish parliament building.

Students in high schools around the world are planning to skip school Friday to protest the inaction of governments on climate change and to demand action, according to media reports.

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The protest started with a single student in Sweden, who began skipping school on Fridays last August to protest in front of the Swedish parliament building.

Greta Thunberg, a pigtailed now 16-year-old, was warned against staging the solitary protests by her parents and her classmates refused to join her, according to The Guardian.

Just eight months later, Thunberg’s protests have sparked the international Fridays for Future movement involving teenagers and young people around the world.

Friday's global climate strike involving students from 90 countries and more than 1,200 cities could be one of the largest environmental protests in history, according to CNN.

Thunberg said she's excited about the growing movement and explained to The Guardian how it started for her.

“I overthink. Some people can just let things go, but I can’t, especially if there’s something that worries me or makes me sad,” she said.

“I remember when I was younger, and in school, our teachers showed us films of plastic in the ocean, starving polar bears and so on. I cried through all the movies. My classmates were concerned when they watched the film, but when it stopped, they started thinking about other things. I couldn’t do that. Those pictures were stuck in my head.”

So, she took action, inspired by the Parkland school students who protested gun violence after a massacre at their high school.

Thunberg said world leaders are still resisting taking any action on the warming climate.

“They are desperately trying to change the subject whenever the school strikes come up. They know they can’t win this fight because they haven’t done anything.”

Thunberg is hoping that will change as more and more people join the movement.

Scientists around the world agree that climate change is already here. Since the early 1900s, the world’s climate has warmed by 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit.

A recent United Nations report determined that greenhouse gas emissions must be slashed in half by 2030 or the world could see a mass die-off of coral reefs, worsening water and food shortages and increased wildfires.

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