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ENVIRONMENT

Police detain Greta Thunberg at London climate protest

UK police on Tuesday removed Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg from a protest outside the energy sector's annual London get-together.

Police detain Greta Thunberg at London climate protest
Environmental activist Greta Thunberg is taken away by police officers during a climate protest in London on Tuesday. Photo: AP Photo/Kin Cheung

The 20-year-old activist, who has become a key face of the movement to fight climate change, was taken away by two police officers and put into the back of a police van outside the Energy Intelligence Forum, an AFP photographer reported.

Joining a mass protest, Thunberg earlier slammed “closed door” agreements struck between politicians and representatives of the oil and gas industry.

“Behind these closed doors, spineless politicians are making deals and compromises with lobbyists from (the) destructive fossil fuel industry,” Thunberg told journalists outside the venue hosting the annual gathering, which runs until Thursday. 

Several hundred protestors gathered by the InterContinental London Park Lane hotel during the “Oily Money Out” demonstration, organised by pressure groups Fossil Free London and Greenpeace, blocking all entrances to the venue.

The carbon-intensive sector has faced fierce criticism from the green lobby for continuing to invest in dirty fossil fuels and worsen climate change — instead of accelerating the shift towards cleaner renewable energy.

“The world is drowning in fossil fuels. Our hopes and dreams and lives are being washed away by a flood of greenwashing and lies,” added Thunberg.

“It has been clear for decades that the fossil fuel industries were well aware of the consequences of their business models, and yet, they have done nothing.

“The opposite — they have actively delayed, distracted and denied the causes of the climate crisis and spread doubts about their own engagement in it,” she said.

Oil bosses

The gathering will be addressed on Tuesday by a host of industry bigwigs, including Shell chief executive Wael Sawan, his counterpart at French group TotalEnergies Patrick Pouyanne, and Saudi Aramco boss Amin Nasser.

Outside the forum, demonstrators banged drums and chanted “stop the oil, stop the gas” and “We are unstoppable, another world is possible”.

“I’ve got six grandchildren. I have nightmares about the future for them,” protestor Doro Marden told AFP.

Demonstrators argue that most industry profit is ploughed back into dirty energy that worsens climate change.

“Oil companies have racked up billions upon billions of profit, breaking records across the board last year. Oily CEOs took home multi-million pound pay cheques,” Fossil Free London said in a statement.

“The overwhelming majority of this money is going straight back into fossil fuel expansion, not the green energy they claim to support.”

Many participants were unable to access the gathering this morning, with five demonstrators arrested on suspicion of obstructing a highway and taken into custody, the Metropolitan Police said.

By AFP’s Oliver Devos

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WEATHER

Swedish Baltic Sea island records hottest May day in over 150 years

The Swedish island of Gotland has never before recorded such high temperatures in the month of May.

Swedish Baltic Sea island records hottest May day in over 150 years

Weather records for Visby, the main town on Gotland, go back more than 150 years.

“Yesterday, Visby had 27.9C which is the highest temperature in May since the start in 1859,” meteorologist Magdalena Folestad told Swedish public broadcaster P4 Gotland about the weather on Tuesday.

There’s still some way to go before Gotland’s all-time weather record, any month, is broken. On August 8th, 1975, the mercury climbed to 35.2C in the village of Buttle.

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