Calling for “enormous” pressure of resistance climate change After the terrible report on Monday United Nations Scientific Group, Activist Greta Sandberg Said she plans to attend the Global Climate Conference this year in Glasgow, Scotland.
The major UN conference will test the ambitions of countries to curb global warming, which is a milestone Monday Science Report The warning has been dangerously approached beyond the limits agreed by the countries.
“I hope this will sound the alarm in every possible way,” Thunberg said of the report in an interview with Reuters.
“When these extreme weather events occur, many people say, what do those in power need to start acting? What are they waiting for? This requires a lot of things, especially huge pressure from the public and the media,” she said.
The UN report was released three months before the Glasgow meeting in November.

Thunberg, who had convened young people to protest the global climate action, initially said that she would skip the event because of concerns that the uneven promotion of the global COVID-19 vaccine would prevent some countries from participating safely.
But the 18-year-old Swedish candidate said that the British proposal in June to vaccinate delegates has alleviated such concerns to a certain extent.
“I said before that if it’s not fair, I won’t go,” Thunberg said. “But now they say they will vaccinate all representatives who go there. If this is considered fair and safe, then I hope to participate.”
This week, wildfires swept through Greece and Turkey, just a few weeks after deadly floods swept through China and Germany and heat waves swept across the United States. Thunberg said that awareness of climate change is increasing, but “very slowly.”
But she said that world leaders have ignored the scientists’ previous warnings about climate change, and she does not want them to respond to the latest UN report in line with their words and deeds.
“I hope they will go out and give big speeches, press releases or post on social media. They say the climate crisis is very important and we are doing everything we can,” Tunberg said.
“As it is now, nothing has changed. The only thing that has changed is the climate.”
(Reporting by Kate Abnett; Editing by Katy Daigle and Giles Elgood)





