The Big One Day 2: XR links up with Earth Day organisers

Following on from a first successful day, Extinction Rebellion and 200 other organisations are back in central London today. There were an estimated 20,000 people in Westminster on Friday for the People’s Pickets, with groups gathering outside major government departments, as well as outside the Tufton Street think-tanks and the Houses of Parliament, to highlight the environmental and social failures across them all. 40,000 people watched XR’s own live coverage, The Big One TV, across multiple platforms [1].

An estimated 50,000 people are expected over the course of the four days with attendees today meeting on Victoria Street at 1pm for a Unite for Nature Rally. The crowd will be addressed by TV presenter Chris Packham, Insect Apocalypse author Dave Goulson, Jyoti Fernandes from Land Workers’ Alliance, and Delia Mattis from Black Lives Matter speaking on the current climate and ecological crisis and solutions. The Biodiversity March, which has been arranged with Earth Day organisers, is set to start from Westminster Abbey at 1:30pm with attendees encouraged to don costumes, masks and nature based art.

The route will circle around government departments in Westminster, ending in Parliament Square for a mass ‘die-in’, a symbolic spectacle where participants will spread out and lie down in silence, in memory and mourning for the heartbreaking 70% decline in wild animal populations since the first Earth Day in 1970. [2] A recent study shows that the ecosystems we depend on for our survival are vanishing quicker than in any of the five mass extinctions that have struck our planet. [3]

Our government has largely been absent when it comes to addressing the biodiversity crisis, and has so far been absent this weekend, as Extinction Rebellion and allies await a response to our demands before the 5pm deadline on Monday 24th April. We are demanding an end to the fossil fuel era and a fair future guided by the independent advice of ordinary people deliberating through citizens’ assemblies to break the deadlock of capture by private interests. [4]

Greenpeace UK’s executive director, Areeba Hamid, said: “As the government continues to fan the flames of the climate and biodiversity crisis it’s clear that only a collective effort can put it out. We will either win as a movement or lose as individual organisations. And through bringing together groups from across civil society, The Big One will act as the catalyst of a new united fight against the vested interests putting profits over people and the planet – a fight that Greenpeace is glad to be a part of.”

Mathew from XR Exeter Biodiversity Group – the group who had the original idea for the march said: “The ecological side of the crisis is too often overlooked. C02 emissions is just one of several planetary boundaries, including habitat destruction and pollution, that we are already overshooting. Even if we reach zero carbon, continued growth in consumption will lead to ecological collapse. The natural world is suffering and dying; it needs protection and restoration – for its own sake and for human survival.”

Zoe Cohen, a spokesperson for Extinction Rebellion said: “So far the atmosphere has been amazing and it’s been great to see so many people from different organisations come together for the first time. There is a very clear desire from the public to discuss climate solutions together and build something different. The climate and ecological crisis isn’t something that is going to happen in the future, it is already here, we can see it with the noticeable lack of insects and wildlife every spring and summer. It’s time that the government took this seriously and listened to the people here and the many not present who are represented by the organisations here.”

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