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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Scientists, students, activists plan global strike ahead of UN climate summit
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Sep 13, 2019

Danes raise 2.4 mn euro in first climate telethon
Copenhagen (AFP) Sept 14, 2019 - Danes donated around 2.4 million euro ($2.6 million) on Saturday for the planting of trees, in a telethon event described as the world's first to focus on the climate.

For every donation of 20 Danish kroner (about $3 or 2.7 euros), one tree will be planted, and 20 percent of the funds raised will go to forest conservation efforts in Denmark and abroad.

The objective of the event broadcast on public TV channel TV2 was to raise 20 million kroner in order to plant one million trees in the Scandinavian country.

At the end of the televised event the funds raised were still a little shy of the goal, but enough for the planting of 914,233 trees.

"It's a positive way to inspire people, showing how to make a difference, with a small act to tackle the climate crisis," said Kim Nielsen, founder of the Growing Trees Network Foundation, which is part of the project.

"It's the first time a charity show has focussed on climate issues on TV, it's very exciting," he told AFP.

According to a recent survey published by the European Commission 83 percent of Danes consider climate change to be a "very serious" problem.

Planting trees is one of the ways people can reduce the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.

"One million trees it's not a lot in a global perspective, but the idea is to make people aware of what they can do," Nielsen said.

The first trees are expected to be planted some time between late October and late November in protected areas owned by certain municipalities, the State or the Church in Denmark.

Environmental activists, student leaders, scientists and other organizers held a press conference this week to discuss their plans for next week's global climate strike.

Next Friday, Sept. 20, millions of people are planning to walk out of their homes, workplaces and classrooms and take to the streets to demand action of climate change.

The action is planned for three days before the United Nations holds its Climate Action Summit on Sept. 23 in New York.

As CO2 emissions continue to rise and weather stations continue to record temperatures, activists are demanding a rapid end to the era of fossil fuels. Organizers hope the global strike illustrates the force of their movement and the urgency of their demands, via mass demonstration -- power in numbers, signs and chants.

Next week's strike will be the third global climate strike. The first, in March, inspired 1.6 million students to walk out of classrooms and protest. Thousands more, including scientists, teachers and politicians, joined the second strike in May.

"The momentum is now building and September 20 will be a demonstration of that momentum," Bill McKibben, author and founder of 350.org, said during an intro to Thursday's online press conference. "It's going to be a hell of an interesting, big, beautiful and vibrant day."

Earlier this year, thousands of scientists signed a letter -- published in the journal Nature -- pledging support for the student-led strikes, claiming that the urgency of their demands were justified by the scientific consensus.

One of the scientists who signed the letter, Doreen Stabinksy, an environmental scientist at the College of the Atlantic in Maine, joined Thursday's press conference to pledge her continued support.

"Thousands of scientists around the world are going to be striking next Friday," Stabinsky said. "We know we what we need to do, know what actions we need to take. But we need political will do accomplish these things, and right now, our political leaders are failing us."

Climate researchers with the United Nations suggest fossil fuel emissions need to be reduced to zero by 2030 in order to prevent the planet's temperature from rising more 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Several student activists and strike organizers joined the call, including students from as far away as South Africa and the Philippines. The students said they hoped their efforts would raise awareness in their home countries, where many people recognize that weather patterns are changing -- temperatures are rising and droughts are getting worse -- but where "climate change ignorance is high."

Next Friday's action will features hundreds of strikes, which are being organized around the world. Activists expect the largest turnout yet.

"We are calling on everyone to join us, we need a truly diverse and multi-generational movement, made of people from all ages and backgrounds, not just the youth," said Jerome Foster II, youth climate activist. "We need adults to stand up and call for action and to support young people and do things that young people can't do. We should be fighting for our future."

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CLIMATE SCIENCE
World must adapt to 'inevitable' climate change, warns report
Paris (AFP) Sept 10, 2019
Nations rich and poor must invest now to protect against the effects of climate change or pay an even heavier price later, a global commission warned Tuesday. Spending $1.8 trillion across five key areas over the next decade would not only help buffer the worst impacts of global warming but could generate more than $7 trillion in net benefits, the report from the Global Commission on Adaptation argued. "We are the last generation that can change the course of climate change, and we are the first ... read more

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