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Teenage activist reaches US on zero-carbon yacht

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New York: Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg was due to sail into a Manhattan harbour on Wednesday after a 15-day journey crossing the Atlantic in a zero-carbon yacht.


“Land!! The lights of Long Island and New York City ahead,” the 16-year-old tweeted early on Wednesday alongside a dark, blurry photo of lights in the distance.


She later wrote on Twitter that her yacht had anchored off the entertainment district of Coney Island in Brooklyn to clear customs and immigration. Thunberg is expected to dock at North Cove Marina near the World Trade Center around 2:15 pm (1815 GMT), according to a spokesperson.


The teenage activist herself tweeted that she should arrive around 2:45 pm after the 3,000-nautical-mile (5,550 kilometres) trip.


Thunberg will make brief remarks before answering questions from journalists, the spokesperson added.


She is sailing to New York to attend a UN summit on zero emissions next month after refusing to fly there because of the carbon emissions caused by planes.


Thunberg was offered a ride on the Malizia II racing yacht skippered by Pierre Casiraghi, the son of Monaco’s Princess Caroline, and German round-the-world sailor Boris Herrmann.The yacht left Plymouth in southern England on August 14, and the teenager marked the first anniversary of the start of her school strike on August 20.


Thunberg, who was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome at the age of 12, began sitting outside the Swedish parliament in August 2018 to get members of parliament to act on climate change.


She was quickly joined by other students around the world, as word of her strike spread through the media, and the “Fridays for future” movement was born.


The 18-metre yacht features state-of-the-art solar panels on its deck and sides, and two hydro-generators provide the vessel’s electricity.


It can travel at speeds of around 35 knots (70 kilometres an hour).


The Swede has endured cramped and rudimentary conditions onboard, eating freeze-dried food and using a bucket as a toilet.


Thunberg said earlier in the week that she expected to arrive in New York on Tuesday but rough seas south of Nova Scotia slowed their progress.


The teenager 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.


She has also received criticism and abuse for her uncompromising attitude.


Her voyage sparked controversy after a spokesman for co-skipper Herrmann told Berlin newspaper TAZ that several people would fly into New York to help take the yacht back to Europe.


Hermann himself will also return by plane, according to the spokesman.


Team Malizia’s manager insisted however that the young activist’s journey would be climate neutral, as the flights would “be offset”.


Thunberg has said that she does not yet know how she will return to Europe.


Ahead of the UN summit on September 23, Thunberg will take part in youth demonstrations, before heading to Canada, Mexico and then to Chile for another UN conference in December. — AFP


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