Greta Thunberg has arrived in Glasgow ahead of the COP26 summit which starts tomorrow.
The 18-year-old climate change activist was snapped getting off a train at Glasgow Central at around 6.40pm after travelling up from London.
Climate protesters held a demonstration at the travel hub ahead of her arrival, as huge crowds packed in to greet Greta.
After her rock star welcome, she later tweeted: “Finally in Glasgow for the #COP26! And thank you for the very warm welcome.”
It came after she joined climate change protesters outside the Standard Chartered headquarters in the UK capital on Friday.
It was confirmed earlier this week that the young Swede will join climate change protesters at Glasgow’s Kelvingrove Park on November 5, with a march planned through the city’s George Square.

Greta also extended the invitation to ScotRail and city's refuse workers that had originally planned to go on strike during the climate change summit.
She is one of 30,000 people expected to descend on Glasgow for COP26, which has been described as the world’s last chance at avoiding a climate catastrophe.
World leaders are expected to thrash out a new climate change agreement as current projections show that the globe is falling well short of the goal laid out in the Paris Agreement of 2015.
All of the Paris Agreement signatories pledged to limit global warming to well below two degrees and aim to limit it to 1.5 degrees.
But Greta Thunberg’s attendance at the climate change conference currently remains unclear.
She told BBC journalist Andrew Marr she has not been invited officially and believes that many people “might be scared” to invite too many radical young people as it “might make them look bad.”
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