Greta Thunberg accuses world leaders of denial on climate change

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Greta Thunberg accuses world leaders of denial on climate change

Greta Thunberg has accused countries including the UK of being in denial over the extent of the climate and ecological crisis and using creative carbon accounting to augment their green credentials.

In an opinion piece for the Guardian, the Swedish activist says world leaders have been responsible for several years of inaction in reducing emissions which she has termed their decades of blah, blah, blah Thunberg also accused the UK, the US and China of spinning emissions statistics to make it appear that their levels are lower.

She wrote: Between 1990 and 2016 the UK lowered its territorial emissions by 41%. However, once you include the full scale of the UK emissions such as consumption of imported goods, international aviation and shipping etc the reduction is more like 15%.

And this is excluding burning of biomass, like at Drax s Selby plant a heavily subsidised so-called renewable power plant that is, according to analysis, the UK s biggest single emitter of CO 2 and the third largest in all of Europe. Yet the government still considers the UK to be a global leader in climate change.

The UK is, of course, far from the only country relying on such creative carbon accounting. China, currently the world s biggest emitter of CO is planning to build 43 new coal power plants on top of the 1,000 already in operation while also claiming to be an ecological trailblazer committed to leaving a clean and beautiful world to future generations. The 18 year-old also believes there are no climate leaders at least not among high-income nations due to a lack of public awareness and pressure from the media. Her comments come ahead of the UN Cop 26 climate talks which the UK is hosting in Glasgow starting on 31 October.

Thunberg s stance echoes remarks by the Queen who criticised world leaders inaction on addressing the climate crisis last week after acknowledging she is irritated by individuals who talk but don t do Other royals, such as Prince William and Prince Charles, have also recently weighed in on the climate breakdown.

The UK government published its net zero strategy on Tuesday ahead of the Cop 26 climate meeting, pledging more investment into electric cars, on-street charging points and planting trees.

It detailed plans to meet legal targets to reduce emissions to net zero by 2050, but it was met with criticism for not providing enough policies or investment to drive the transformation needed.

The strategy said it would support 440,000 jobs in new sectors or for people moving from cleaner industries to high-carbon ones, along with unlocking 90 bn in private investment in 2030 on the way to the mid-century goal.

Officials insisted the policies would deliver the carbon cuts needed to meet UK legal targets in 2020 s and 2030 s and deliver on commitments to cut greenhouse gases by 68% by 2030 under the Paris climate accord.

However, the shadow business secretary, Ed Miliband, said: The plan falls short on delivery and while there is modest short-term investment, there is nothing like the commitment we believe is required.