Tens
of millions switch off worldwide for 'Earth Hour': organisers 2
days ago SYDNEY
(AFP) Tens of millions of people switched off lightbulbs this weekend as
part of a global campaign to throw the spotlight on climate change, organisers
of the Australian-led 'Earth Hour' initiative said. From
Sydney to Asia, Europe, Canada and the US, "many tens of millions" of
people flicked the switch on Saturday night, plunging cities, towns and homes
into darkness, chief of environmental group WWF-Australia Greg Bourne said. The
event, which was first held in Sydney last year, saw the lights dimmed in major
cities at 8:00 pm local time, with skyscrapers, public monuments and private homes
plunged into darkness. Bourne
said the response from around the world had been astounding. While
26 cities are officially signed up for 'Earth Hour', Bourne said the campaign
had already stretched well beyond that and that the intention was for the voluntary,
60-minute blackout to be even bigger in 2009. "In
pretty much every country in the world, someone has signed up. Whether it be one,
two, three or 3,000 individuals," he told AFP. "Basically
every continent including Antarctica had some involvement and what I think will
happen next year is that we will get deeper and deeper involvement in Asia, in
Russia. "We're
pretty certain, that when we do it next year, China will become very much more
involved," he added. Earth
Hour organisers asked governments, businesses and individuals to switch off the
power for one hour on Saturday to save energy and thereby produce fewer greenhouse
gases. Bourne
said the campaign was less about making a real reduction in energy usage, and
more about increasing public awareness about energy efficiency. He
said indications were that the event had been a success in not only Sydney, where
the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House faded into relative darkness, but around
the world. "We
had 2.2 million last year; I reckon by the time we finally count it up, we will
have about 100 million people involved around the world," he said. Energy
Australia, which supplies much of Sydney's electricity, said a drop of about 8.4
percent in energy usage had been recorded in the city during the hour, equivalent
to 1.6 million light bulbs being switched off. A
national poll of some 3,400 people taken on Saturday and Sunday indicated that
58 percent of people living in major Australian cities had participated in the
event by switching off lights or other appliances. Meanwhile
power consumption in Christchurch, the only New Zealand city participating in
the global event, plummeted nearly 13 percent during the voluntary switch-off,
figures released Sunday showed. In
Ireland, the initiative was led in the capital by the Dublin City Council, which
turned off all non-street lighting on 13 of the 14 bridges in the city. It also
turned off all the lights in City Hall and civic buildings. Cities
involved in 'Earth Hour' include Aalborg, Aarhus, Adelaide, Atlanta, Bangkok,
Brisbane, Canberra, Chicago, Christchurch, Copenhagen, Darwin, Dublin, Hobart,
Manila, Melbourne, Montreal, Odense, Ottawa, Perth, Phoenix, San Francisco, Suva,
Sydney, Tel Aviv, Toronto and Vancouver.
|