Timi Barabas, of Hamilton's Rototuna High School, is one of tens of thousands of pupils taking part in today's School Strike 4 Climate marches. Photo / Alan Gibson
Tens of thousands of children are again taking to the streets over climate change action - and this time, they want Kiwi workers to march with them.
Nearly 100 businesses and universities around the country today join pupils for the third - and expectedly biggest - School Strike 4 Climate protest.
It caps off a week in which the movement's 16-year-old figurehead Greta Thunberg dressed down a summit of world leaders, and a major UN report warned time was fast running out to solve the climate crisis.
More than 40 events around New Zealand are scheduled today, from large demonstrations in main centres to rallies in places as remote as Great Barrier Island.
"We are definitely expecting it will be the biggest turnout yet," said the strike's national co-ordinator, Paekakariki teen Sophie Handford.
Last Friday, millions of young people packed out parks in world cities like Sydney, Berlin and New York, as part of the global push.
Handford said New Zealand's events had been scheduled a week later as many pupils were sitting school exams.
"But there happens to be a global strike on September 27 as well, involving 170 countries and more than 6300 events – so we are looking at something the same size as last week."
Today's event was organised in solidarity with Wellington protester Ollie Langridge's weekly vigil on the lawns of Parliament, calling for the Government to declare a climate change emergency.
Handford was heartened that workers from 90 businesses – ranging from bookshops and bakeries to consultancies and architecture firms – would be downing tools to take part.
"We've deliberately scheduled our events around lunchtime, so adults can join us by taking a longer break. We'd like the focus of this event to be not just on students."
Unlike the country's first rally on March 15 – quickly overshadowed by that day's terror attack in Christchurch – there had been seemingly little push-back from schools this time, she said.
"It's helped that universities have jumped onboard, and that we've had some good conversations with the main teachers unions," she said.
"But also, we've seen students are becoming a lot more willing to take action, regardless of what their school is saying, because there is so much at stake, and that this is the most important issue for so many young people in New Zealand."
Many Government and council leaders have voiced their support for the drive – but not all of them.
Acting Prime Minister Winston Peters said pupils should be staying in school, adding they could learn all they needed to know about climate change by "seeing what the Government is doing".
The Ministry of Education has meanwhile shared guidelines with schools around attendance and legal responsibilities.
Further marches – or other forms of action - weren't being ruled out, Handford said.
"We are committed to doing this until we see our demands met."
She said people could also help their cause by signing an open letter urging the Government to declare a climate emergency, cease all extraction and exploration of fossil fuels and pass a Zero Carbon Act that strived for net zero carbon emissions by 2040.
Earlier in the week, 16-year-old Thunberg scolded leaders attending a UN climate summit in New York, telling them: "We are at the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth."
On Wednesday, the UN released its latest special report, warning that rising, warming, acidifying oceans and melting ice could be affecting more than a billion people by as soon as 2050.
Whether sea levels rose by between 30cm and 60cm - or by up to a vastly more damaging 110cm - depended on emissions being slashed enough in the next two decades to keep warming below 2C above pre-industrial levels.
And I don't think it is right to sit at home and write negative comments about people who work so hard for change – who actually get up and do something.
I am originally from Hungary, which just experienced one of the hottest summers in its history.
The winters there are now very cold and the summers are very hot. This is not how it used to be. Since I moved to New Zealand, things have also changed.
Climate change does exist. And there is so much work to do.
I want to see businesses and world leaders, all around the world, start making the protection of our planet and future a priority.
I want to see them listening to us and taking us seriously.