Greta Thunberg

Student

Birthday January 3, 2003

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Stockholm, Sweden

Age 21 years old

Nationality Sweden

#1908 Most Popular

2003

Greta Tintin Eleonora Ernman Thunberg (born 3 January 2003) is a Swedish environmental activist known for challenging world leaders to take immediate action for climate change mitigation.

Thunberg's climate activism began when she persuaded her parents to adopt lifestyle choices that reduced her family's carbon footprint.

Greta Tintin Eleonora Ernman Thunberg was born on 3 January 2003, in Stockholm, Sweden, to opera singer Malena Ernman and actor Svante Thunberg.

Her paternal grandfather was actor and director Olof Thunberg.

As explained by The Week, "with a thespian father" and singer mother, "it is perhaps unsurprising that [ Thunberg ] has a slightly unusual name.... Thunberg shares her second name with the adventuring creation of Belgian cartoonist Georges Remi, better known as Hergé."

She has a younger sister, Beata.

2011

Thunberg says she first heard about climate change in 2011, when she was eight years old, and could not understand why so little was being done about it.

The situation depressed her, and as a result, at the age of 11, she stopped talking and eating much and lost 10 kg in two months.

Eventually, she was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome, obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), and selective mutism.

In one of her first speeches demanding climate action, Thunberg described her selective mutism as meaning she "only speaks when necessary".

Thunberg struggled with depression for almost four years before she began her school strike campaign.

When she started protesting, her parents did not support her activism.

Her father said he did not like her missing school but added: "[We] respect that she wants to make a stand. She can either sit at home and be really unhappy, or protest and be happy."

2015

She then said that she would be continuing school striking for the climate every Friday until Sweden was in compliance with the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

Thunberg's youth and blunt speaking manner fueled her rise to the status of a global icon.

Shortly after Thunberg's first school strike for the climate protest, other students engaged in similar protests in their communities.

They then united and organized the school strike for climate movement under the banner of Fridays for Future.

Her diagnosis of Asperger's syndrome was made public nationwide in Sweden by her mother in May 2015, in order to help families in similar situations.

While acknowledging that her diagnosis "has limited [her] before", Thunberg does not view her Asperger's as an illness, and has instead called it her "superpower".

She was later described as not only the best-known climate change activist, but also the best-known autism activist.

In 2021, Thunberg said that many people in the Fridays for Future movement are autistic, and very inclusive and welcoming.

She thinks that the reason so many autistic people become climate activists is that they cannot look away, and have to tell the truth as they see it: "I know lots of people who have been depressed, and then they have joined the climate movement or Fridays for Future and have found a purpose in life and found friendship and a community that they are welcome in."

She considers the best things that have resulted from her activism to be friendships and happiness.

For about two years, Thunberg challenged her parents to lower the family's carbon footprint and overall impact on the environment by becoming vegan, upcycling, and giving up flying.

2018

At age 15, Thunberg began skipping school on 20 August 2018, vowing to remain out of school until after the national Swedish election in an attempt to influence the outcome.

She protested outside the Swedish parliament where she called for stronger action on climate change by holding up a Skolstrejk för klimatet (School Strike for Climate) sign and handing out informational flyers.

After the election, Thunberg spoke in front of her supporters, telling them to use their phones to film her.

After Thunberg addressed the 2018 United Nations Climate Change Conference, weekly student climate strike protests took place on Fridays around the world.

2019

In 2019, multiple coordinated multi-city protests involved over a million students each.

To avoid carbon-intensive flying, Thunberg sailed on a carbon-free yacht from Plymouth, England, to New York City where she attended and addressed the 2019 UN Climate Action Summit.

In her speech, Thunberg scolded the world's leaders by exclaiming "How dare you" in reference to their perceived indifference and inaction to the climate crisis.

Her admonishment made worldwide headlines.

Thunberg's rise to world fame made her an ad hoc leader in the climate activist community.

She also faced heavy criticism, much of it mocking her as a naïve teenager.

Thunberg's influence on the world stage has been described by The Guardian and other media outlets as the "Greta effect".

She has received numerous honours and awards, including an honorary Fellowship of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, inclusion in Time 100 most influential people, named the youngest Time Person of the Year in 2019, inclusion in the Forbes list of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women (2019), and multiple nominations for the Nobel Peace Prize.

After Thunberg graduated from high school in June 2023, her protest tactics began to escalate.

As an adult, her protests have included defying lawful orders to disperse—and peaceful but defiant confrontations with police—which have led to arrests, convictions, and one acquittal.

Thunberg's activism has also evolved to include causes other than climate change, most notably the Israel–Hamas war.

Thunberg co-authored an op-ed titled "We won't stop speaking out about Gaza's suffering – there is no climate justice without human rights" wherein she articulated her and Sweden's Fridays for Future's position.