Teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg
sets sail on Wednesday for New York, heading for a UN summit on a
zero-emissions yacht skippered by a member of Monaco's ruling family.
The 16-year-old Swede, whose school strikes have inspired children
across the world to protest against global warming, refuses to fly
because of the carbon emissions caused by planes.
But she has been offered a lift on the Malizia II racing yacht, along
with her father Svante and a filmmaker to document the journey, that
will allow her to attend the UN talks in September with a clear
conscience.
The 60-foot (18-metre) boat is skippered by Pierre Casiraghi, vice
president of the Monaco Yacht Club and a member of the principality's
ruling family, and German round-the-world sailor Boris Herrmann.
The journey takes about two weeks -- the yacht can travel at speeds of
around 35 knots (70 kilometres an hour) but will be heading into the
wind for much of the time so will be slower, and the captain wants a
smooth ride.
"The objective is to arrive safe and sound in New York," Herrmann told
AFP as he made final preparations in the English port of Plymouth.
- 'Pressure on people in power'
Thunberg has become a figurehead for climate action with her stark
warnings of catastrophe if the world does not act now to cut carbon
emissions and curb global warming.
Speaking to AFP before she set sail, the activist said: "Of course there
are many people who don't understand and accept the science.
"I will just have to do what I have always done -- ignore them and just
tell the science as it is," she added in reference to her North American
trip.
"We create an international opinion and movement so that people stand together and put pressure on the people in power."
The yacht is made for racing, with foils, or wings, that lift it out of the water for a faster and smoother ride.
Inside it is sparse, fitted with high-tech navigation equipment, an
on-board ocean laboratory to monitor CO2 levels in the water, and four
bunks -- Herrmann and Casiraghi will share one, sleeping in turns.
The toilet is a blue plastic bucket, complete with a biodegradable bag
that can be thrown overboard, and meals will be freeze-dried packets of
vegan food mixed with water heated on a tiny gas stove.
But state-of-the-art solar panels adorn the yacht's deck and sides while
there are two hydro-generators, which together provide all the
electricity they need on board.
Thunberg has never sailed before this week, and got seasick on their
first journey out of Plymouth on Monday, but said she was looking
forward to the adventure.
The teenager, who has spent hours on trains across Europe to spread her message, was relaxed about the basic conditions.
"You can't really ask for that much if you get to sail across the
Atlantic for free," she said, adding: "I am grateful for what I have."
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