Thunberg says people in Davos fuel 'destruction of planet'
Police officers hold Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg (C) out of a group of demonstrators and activists in Erkelenz, western Germany, on January 17, 2023, as demonstrations continue against a coal mine extension in the nearby village of Luetzerath. Already abandoned by its original residents, Luetzerath has become a symbol for resistance against fossil fuels. Energy giant RWE has permission for the expansion of the mine under a compromise agreement that also includes that RWE will stop producing electricity with coal in western Germany by 2030 -- eight years earlier than previously planned. With Russia's gas supply cut in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine, Germany has had recourse to coal, firing up mothballed power plants. Federico Gambarini / dpa / AFP
Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg accused attendees of the World Economic Forum in Davos of "fuelling the destruction of the planet" as she arrived at the event in the Swiss Alps on Thursday.
"We are right now in Davos where (there are) basically the people who are mostly fuelling the destruction of the planet," she said.
"The people who are at the very core of the climate crisis, the people who are investing in fossil fuels etc, and yet somehow these are the people that we seem to rely on for solving our problems."
The 20-year-old Swede spoke on the sidelines of the WEF with fellow activists Helena Gualinga of Ecuador, Vanessa Nakate of Uganda and Luisa Neubauer of Germany at a CNBC panel that included International Energy Agency head Fatih Birol.
Thunberg said change will have to come from "the bottom up".
"Without massive public pressure from the outside, these people are going to go as far as they possibly can, as long as they can get away with it," she said.
"They will continue to invest in fossil fuels. They will continue to to throw people under the bus for their own gain."
Birol said the energy sector must be transformed or "we have no chance whatsoever to reach our climate targets".
He said that attention to climate change is "sliding down" the international agenda including in Davos.
"It is now time to ring the alarm bells, bring the climate crisis together with other crises, the energy crisis, the food crisis, atop of the international policy agenda," he said.