PLYMOUTH: Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg poses for a photograph during an interview with AFP onboard the Malizia II sailing yacht at the Mayflower Marina. - AFP

PLYMOUTH: A year
after starting a school strike that made her a figurehead for the fight against
global warming, Greta Thunberg believes her uncompromising message is getting
through -- even if action remains thin on the ground. The 16-year-old Swede,
who sets sail for New York on Wednesday to deliver her demand for climate
action to North America, has been a target of abuse but sees that as proof she
is having an effect.

"The debate
is shifting. I feel like people are taking this more urgently, people are
starting to be more aware, slowly," she told AFP on board the 60-foot
(18-metre) yacht taking her across the Atlantic. However, she admits this still
needs to be matched by action, warning: "When you see the big picture
almost nothing positive is happening." Since she made headlines by
skipping school to protest outside the Swedish parliament in August last year,
Thunberg has met political and business leaders across Europe.

Now she is
heading to the United States to attend a UN climate summit in New York in
September -- and as she refuses to fly, she's been offered a lift on a racing
yacht. Malizia II will be skippered by Pierre Casiraghi, a member of the Monaco
royal family, and German sailor Boris Herrmann. The facilities are basic -- the
toilet is a bucket, there is no kitchen -- but it has solar panels and
underwater turbines that allow it to operate without producing carbon
emissions.

Thunberg -- who
has never sailed before this week -- will be onboard for two weeks, along with
her father Svante and a filmmaker. "It just shows how impossible it is to
live sustainably today -- it's absurd that you have to sail across the Atlantic
Ocean like this to get there with no emissions," Thunberg said in the
English port of Plymouth. "But I feel like since I'm one of the few people
in the world who can actually do this I want to take that opportunity to do
it." She has no plans to meet with President Donald Trump in the US,
saying: "I can't say anything that he hasn't already heard."

'They see us as a
threat'

In the past year,
Thunberg has addressed the World Economic Forum in Davos, UN talks in Poland,
been interviewed for Vogue magazine and featured on the new album of band The
1975. She has received several awards and been nominated for the Nobel peace
prize. Thunberg is sceptical about some of those who ask her to appear at their
events.

"Many people
see this an opportunity to invite us, school striking people, to clear their
name in a way," she said. But she adds: "I do this because it is
actually having an impact." For her, the most powerful part of the past
year has been watching the children around the world join her school strike.
"To be a part of such a big and strong movement, the Fridays for Future
movement -- just to see all the children, the young people around the world,
all the millions of young people who are rising up," she said.

Her plaits,
battered trainers and sweatshirt make Thunberg look younger than she is, but
that doesn't stop her critics throwing abuse at the teenager for speaking out.
"I just ignore it because it's also a good sign that they are actually
trying to make us quiet, that means that we are having an impact, and they see
us as a threat," she says.

After New York,
where she also plans to take part in climate demonstrations, she will travel to
Canada and Mexico, before heading to another UN meeting in Chile in December.
Her goal is to ensure "that the climate crisis is being taken as seriously
as it should be taken and that people really start to understand".

"Then
together we create an international opinion, and movement so that people stand
together and put pressure on the people in power," she said. Thunberg does
not like talking about herself, saying she is just an activist, but
acknowledges that having children speak out has a special power."We tell
it like it is, we don't care to be polite. And we make people feel very
guilty." - AFP