Why We’re Striking on September 20th

“We are striking because we have done our homework and they have not. I am here to say, our house is on fire… I want you to act as you would in a crisis. I want you to act as if our house is on fire.”Greta Thunberg

When then 15-year old Greta Thunberg stood outside the Swedish parliament in August 2018 holding a sign that said “School strike for the climate”, little could she have imagined that this simple act would inspire a powerful movement of young people from Accra to Zürich.

Every Friday since, the Fridays for Future youth strikers have been deciding not to attend class and instead march for climate justice and action to tackle the climate crisis. On 15 March 2019, an estimated 1.4 million students in over 2,000 cities around the world protested. Their demands are clear: the world’s decision-makers are failing future generations through their inaction on climate change and need to take responsibility to solve the climate crisis.

And the movement is winning. In February 2019, President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, standing next to Greta, stated his intent to spend hundreds of billions of euros on climate change mitigation, amounting to a fourth of the EU budget. Countries and cities around the world have declared “climate emergencies.” In July 2019, the secretary general of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries declared Thunberg and other young climate activists as the “greatest threat” to the fossil fuel industry; acknowledging the power that young people have when speaking up and mobilizing.

Global Greengrants Fund has been supporting youth climate movements since 2012 through our Next Generation Climate Advisory Board. We were one of the supporters of the early climate strikes back in 2015, when over 50,000 students in 100 countries decided to leave school on the first day of COP21 in Paris. This month, we supported the Fridays for Future summer meeting in Lausanne, an important strategy convening for the youth climate strikers. And we are proud to continue our support to Fridays for Future and youth climate activists, in Europe and elsewhere.

At Global Greengrants, we believe that the future of our planet is in the hands of young people, and we are excited by the powerful potential of the youth climate strikers to effect real change. But we also understand that it is not fair to rest the responsibility of fixing the mistakes of older generations on the shoulders of today’s young people. That is one of the injustices of climate change – that those who have not caused the problems will be most affected by them. It will need all of us, everywhere, to call on political decision-makers to implement the urgent systemic changes we need to avoid climate catastrophe.

That is why, on the 20th of September, Global Greengrants Fund and Global Greengrants Fund UK will be joining the Global Climate Strike, answering the call to action of the youth strikers. We will be leaving work and joining young people in Denver and London on the streets to demand an end to the age of fossil fuels and emergency action to avoid climate breakdown.

You, too, can support young grassroots climate activists around the world. Talk to your children, nieces and nephews or grandchildren about why they are striking, help amplify their demands in your spaces and networks, and join your nearest Global Climate Strike on the 20th of September. Young people are counting on us – let’s show them we have heard them. Let’s show them we care.

 

Eva Rehse

With a background in human rights, civil society development and social action, Eva brings over a decade of experience in project management and resource mobilisation. Previously, Eva worked for Amnesty International as an International Projects Advisor, and for CIVICUS World Assemblies. Eva also worked with the Scottish Biodiversity Forum where she was part of creating Scotland’s first biodiversity strategy. Eva has a M.A. from Bonn University in Political Science and Sociology. She is a member of the European Steering Group of the EDGE Funders Alliance and the Alliance Magazine Editorial Advisory Board, and an alumni of the Oak Foundation and Resource Alliance’s Future Leaders Programme.

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