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who is greta thunberg

Greta Thunberg is a Swedish climate activist who became world‑famous as a teenager for pressuring governments to act more urgently on climate change. She is one of the most prominent faces of the global youth climate movement and helped spark school walkouts and mass climate protests around the world.

Quick Scoop

  • Name: Greta Tintin Eleonora Ernman Thunberg.
  • Born: 3 January 2003, in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Known for: Youth climate activism, “school strike for climate,” Fridays for Future movement.
  • Main focus: Stronger action on climate change, human rights, and climate justice.

How She Became Famous

  • In August 2018, at age 15, she began sitting outside the Swedish parliament with a sign reading “School strike for climate,” skipping school to demand tougher climate policies.
  • Her solo protest inspired students in many countries to join similar Friday strikes, which grew into the global Fridays for Future movement.
  • By 2019, millions were joining climate marches, including a global strike where roughly 4 million people participated worldwide.

What She Does Now

  • Thunberg speaks at major international events, including UN climate meetings and European institutions, urging leaders to cut emissions faster and follow climate science.
  • She has broadened her activism to include issues of global justice, linking climate change with human rights and supporting various humanitarian causes.
  • She published The Climate Book , a collection of essays by climate experts, adding an educational dimension to her activism.

Recognition and Controversy

  • She has been nominated multiple times for the Nobel Peace Prize for her role in mobilizing youth climate activism.
  • Her direct, uncompromising speeches have drawn both strong support and sharp criticism, making her a central, sometimes polarizing, figure in debates about climate policy.

Latest Context and Online Presence

  • In recent years, she has continued frontline activism, including protests and participation in humanitarian efforts connected to conflict and climate justice.
  • She is active on social media, especially X (formerly Twitter), where she mixes climate messaging with sharp, often humorous responses to critics and political figures.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.