Merkel hosts Greta Thunberg for talks on climate crisis

Thunberg and other leading Fridays for Future activists are dismayed at the lack of progress in fighting climate change.

Greta Thunberg Meets With Angela Merkel In Berlin
Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg arrives for the meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel [Maja Hitij/Getty Images]

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has hosted Greta Thunberg and other leading Fridays for Future activists in Berlin for talks on the EU’s climate goals.

Merkel said Swedish 17-year-old Thunberg, along with co-campaigners Luisa Neubauer from Germany and Belgium’s Anuna De Wever and Adelaide Charlier, had requested the meeting and she was “pleased” to welcome them to the chancellery on Thursday.

“We asked her to treat the climate crisis like you treat any other crisis … What we want is leaders, we want people to step up,” Thunberg told reporters following their 90-minute discussion.

Merkel “has a huge responsibility but also a huge opportunity”, she said.

The meeting came exactly two years after Thunberg, then 15, started skipping school to strike outside the Swedish parliament to draw attention to the need for action against global warming.

Greta Thunberg Meets With Angela Merkel In Berlin
Climate activists demonstrate in front of the German Chancellery [Maja Hitij/Getty Images]

The strike movement has since spread across the world and Merkel has repeatedly expressed her admiration for the masses of young people demonstrating every Friday for more climate protection.

But the activists say nothing concrete has changed.

Germany’s targets

Despite its green reputation abroad, Germany is struggling to meet its own climate targets as the country remains heavily reliant on coal because of its decision to phase out nuclear energy after the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

Europe’s top economy was expected to miss its goal of reducing climate-heating greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent this year compared with 1990 levels.

But a government report on Wednesday said the coronavirus could unexpectedly help it meet the target after all, after the pandemic practically halted economic activity and lowered demand for polluting coal.

Germany has promised to abandon coal-generated power by 2038, a date considered far too late by climate activists.

The EU as a whole aims to achieve carbon neutrality – or net-zero greenhouse emissions – by 2050.

Source: News Agencies