21 May 2021

School Strike 4 Climate: Thousands join Australia protest

6:32 pm on 21 May 2021

Thousands of Australian children have walked out of school to attend protests, calling for action on climate change.

Student demonstrators and thousands of environmentalists gather holding banners for the Climate Strike to draw the attention of government on global warming and climate change, in Melbourne, Australia on September 20, 2019.

One student taking part in a protest says he has experienced increasing heatwaves and low air quality, in Western Sydney. (file pic) Photo: Recep Sakar / Anadolu Agency / AFP

Up to 50,000 students are expected at School Strike for Climate rallies across the country.

It's the latest grassroots campaign by young people pushing for action on the climate crisis.

Australia has long faced criticism for refusing to set more ambitious emissions targets.

David Soriano, a 17-year-old attending a Sydney rally, told the BBC he was worried about the future and wants the government to see the youth movement "as one to be reckoned with".

"We're scared and concerned. We're doubtful that there might not be a future in store for the generations after us, and even our own generation," he said.

Soriano said he had experienced increasing heatwaves and low air quality, in Western Sydney where he lives.

The protesters are also calling for no new coal, oil and gas projects in Australia, including the controversial Adani mine.

India's Adani Enterprises has attracted criticism in parts of Australia for developing a new thermal coal mine.

Protesters want 100 percent renewable energy generation and exports by 2030 too, along with plans for the transition away from fossil fuel jobs.

"I also fear for my extended family in the Philippines who, because of climate change, have been seeing more severe typhoons at an unpredictable rate," Soranio said.

"I hope the government will hear our voices," he added.

Australia's climate policies

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has faced sustained criticism over climate policy and international pressure to step up efforts to cut emissions.

At a global climate summit last month, Morrison resisted calls to set more ambitious carbon emission targets while other major nations vowed deeper reductions.

"Future generations... will thank us not for what we have promised, but what we deliver," Morrison said at the summit.

Australia is one of the world's biggest carbon emitters on a per capita basis.

The country has warmed on average by 1.4C since national records began in 1910, according to its science and weather agencies.

That has led to an increase in the number of extreme weather events, including forest fires.

The government has said action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions would focus on technology.

It is leaning heavily on a gas-led transition, and this week announced plans for a new $A600m ($NZ647m)gas power plant in New South Wales.

Critics argue Australia should not be focusing so heavily on gas, and instead invest more in renewable energy sources.

"Simply put, gas doesn't make economic sense in Australia any more... it increases emissions at a time when the rest of the world is reducing emissions, and it creates very few jobs," Nicki Hutley, economist at the Climate Council, said.

The announcement of the new plant came as a report from the International Energy Agency recommended that no new oil and natural gas fields are required beyond those that have already been approved for development, in order to reach net zero-emissions by 2050.

-BBC / ABC

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