Greta Thunberg has said she does not plan to attend the UN climate conference due to be held in Glasgow later this year.
The 18-year-old climate activist believes the COP26 summit should be postponed, with the focus instead on the global rollout of the coronavirus vaccination.
World leaders are expected to attend the summit which has been described as the most significant international meeting on climate change since the Paris Agreement in 2015.
It is being held at the Scottish Event Campus (SEC) from November 1-12 and a call for volunteers to support staging the event has attracted 10,011 applicants – more than 10 times the roughly 1,000 places available.
READ MORE: UK Government denies claims Glasgow climate change summit COP26 could be postponed
Taking to Twitter to explain her reasoning, Ms Thunberg said she would want everyone to have a chance to take part on equal terms.
She explained: "Of course I would love to attend the Glasgow #COP26, but not unless everyone can take part on the same terms.
"Right now many countries are vaccinating healthy young people, often at the expense of risk groups and front line workers (mainly from global south, as usual...).
"Inequality and climate injustice is already the heart of the climate crisis. If people can’t be vaccinated and travel to be represented equally that’s undemocratic and would worsen the problem. Vaccine nationalism won’t solve the pandemic. Global problems need global solutions."
She added: "But if current trends continue and the #cop26 has to be delayed that doesn’t mean we have to delay the urgent action required. We don’t have to wait for conferences nor anyone or anything else to dramatically start reducing our emissions. Solidarity and action can start today.
"And a digital solution is of course far from optimal. High speed internet connection and access to computers is extremely unequal in the world. In that case we would lack representation from those whose voices need to be heard the most when it comes to the climate crisis."
Elsewhere, Ms Thunberg also said the only way forward in the fight against climate change is to “treat the crisis like a crisis”.
The Swedish climate and environmental activist was speaking ahead of the airing of BBC series Greta Thunberg: A Year To Change The World, which follows her journey during a year off school in 2019 as she explores the science of global warming and challenges world leaders to take action.
Over three episodes, the 18-year-old witnesses first-hand the consequences of climate change and also meets climate scientists and experts, among them naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough.
Thunberg told the PA news agency: “I would like to see us starting to treat the crisis like a crisis, because that’s the only way forward.
“We can’t say ‘I would want them to do this, I would want them to shut down this, and I would want them to start this, and so on’ because, as long as that’s not coming from the people, as long as people are not demanding it, it’s undemocratic, and democracy is the most powerful tool that we have.
“It’s the most precious thing that we have, which we need to take care of, and so what I would want is for us to treat the crisis like a crisis. That is the only way forward.”
Thunberg, who also founded the School Strike for Climate movement, described meeting Sir David as “truly remarkable”.
She said: “It was an amazing opportunity. And it was something that I will never forget. I have spoken to him several times, I think, four times, but only online.
“And then I met him in person and it was truly remarkable. And it was something that I will never forget.
“He’s such an extraordinary person who has been able to experience so much and has witnessed these changes really first-hand as they happened, from the beginning, from when we first became aware of these things.
“So, of course, he has a perspective and a story that very few people have, definitely.”
In the series, Thunberg visits Canada’s Athabasca Glacier, which scientists tell her is melting faster than models had predicted, with a contributing factor being soot from surrounding forest fires falling on it.
She also visits a coal mine in Europe, where she meets Polish workers who tell her about their fears for their industry and the mining culture.
Thunberg said: “Being able to stand on top of a glacier and someone says ‘This will be gone soon, and there’s no way of saving it’…
“Of course, that’s very emotional, and to meet people who have lost everything and to witness these kinds of events first-hand and to witness the consequences of the climate crisis and to meet the people who are actually being affected by it already today, that’s very powerful.
“But also meeting people like the Polish coal miners, that was a very, very important meeting, and also very moving.
“I made many different interviews as well that didn’t make it in the final cuts, but they were just as important and just as incredible to be able to experience.”
– Greta Thunberg: A Year To Change The World begins on BBC One on April 12 at 9pm.
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