Greta Thunberg tells #WEF20 awkward truth on climate change: Nobody is doing anything

Greta Thunberg brought a stark message to the business elite gathering in Davos: Everybody is talking about climate change, but nobody is doing anything.
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Climate change activist Greta Thunberg is only 17 years old, but she commands respect and when she says global business is all talk but no action on climate change, it is bound to force some executives in the packed room in Davos to reconsider their response to demands to stop carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions. And she and her fellow young activists were serious when they told WEF delegates that they won't stop pushing for change. – Editor

By Javier Blas and Laura Millan Lombrana

(Bloomberg) – Greta Thunberg brought a stark message to the business elite gathering in Davos: Everybody is talking about climate change, but nobody is doing anything.

Her appearance at the opening of the World Economic Forum was a striking sign that the debate about how to stop the Earth warming has become mainstream in business circles. Yet only a handful of executives from the oil, gas and coal industries that are chiefly responsible for warming the planet were seen attending the panel at which Thunberg spoke on Tuesday.

"The climate and environment is a hot topic right now, thanks to young people pushing," 17-year-old Thunberg said at the Swiss ski resort, where about 3,000 business and political leaders gather each year. "Pretty much nothing has been done, since the global emissions of CO2 have not reduced."

The Swedish activist's words came as the World Economic Forum sounds alarm bells on climate change. This year and for the first time on record, environmental risks occupy the group's top five long-term concerns, while corporate executives say they're increasingly concerned about environmental issues. But young activists at Davos said none of this is enough.

Thunberg is giving relevance to the Davos gathering, which for years has suffered from criticism that it was largely a billionaires' playground where the rich debated among themselves without hearing outside voices. On Tuesday, there was a full room at this first 8:30am panel featuring young activists – something relatively unusual for a climate change event at Davos.

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