Declining an environmental award from the Nordic Council on Tuesday, Swedish teen climate activist Greta Thunberg called on the region’s countries to “lead the way” in worldwide efforts to meet the Paris accord’s goals and avert climate catastrophe.
“The climate movement does not need any more awards. What we need is for our politicians and the people in power start to listen to the current, best available science.”
—Greta Thunberg, teen climate activist
The 16-year-old leader of the global #FridaysForFuture movement was nominated by her home country and Norway for the 2019 award from the council, a body for inter-parliamentary cooperation among Nordic nations.
Thunberg has accepted other awards—including Amnesty International’s top human rights award and the first “Freedom Prize” from France’s Normandy region —and was nominated for but did not ultimately receive this year’s Nobel Peace Prize. She explained her decision regarding this latest honor in a statement posted to the video-sharing social media platform Instagram.
“I am currently traveling through California and therefore not able to be present with you today,” said Thunberg, who sailed from the United Kingdom to New York City for a United Nations climate summit and related youth-led demonstrations last month and has since traveled throughout North America.
“I want to thank the Nordic Council for this award. It is a huge honor,” she continued. “But the climate movement does not need any more awards. What we need is for our politicians and the people in power start to listen to the current, best available science.”
Thunberg, whose school strikes outside the Swedish Parliament last year sparked a global youth-led movement of protests to demand ambitious climate action, noted that “the Nordic countries have a great reputation around the world when it comes to climate and environmental issues,” but they continue to invest in fossil fuels.
“The gap between what the science says… and politics that run the Nordic countries is gigantic,” she said. “And there are still no signs whatsoever of the changes required.”
Given that “the Paris Agreement, which all of the Nordic countries have signed, is based on the aspect of equity,” Thunberg added, “richer countries must lead the way” in terms of phasing out dirty energy sources and dramatically reducing planet-heating emissions.
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