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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Catherine and Macdonald

Naturalist David Attenborough says U.S. 'out on a limb' on climate

World renowned naturalist Sir David Attenborough delivers the “People’s Seat” address during the opening of COP24 UN Climate Change Conference 2018 in Katowice, Poland December 3, 2018. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

KATOWICE, Poland,(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump is "out on a limb" in his attitude to climate change as nearly every other government, as well as an angry younger generation, are demanding action, British naturalist David Attenborough said on Monday at U.N. climate talks in Poland.

The 92-year-old, whose TV series "Blue Planet II" was avidly watched as far away as China, has been credited with raising awareness of rampant plastic pollution in the oceans. He was speaking to Reuters on the sidelines of the most important U.N. climate conference since 2015.

That year saw the signing of the Paris accord, a U.N.-sponsored deal to agree where the limits of global warming should be set, principally through a radical reduction in the use of fossil fuels. Two weeks of talks in Katowice aim to hammer out details of how that will be achieved.

Asked about Trump's decision to abandon the U.N. process, Attenborough said the United States was "out on a limb".

"I can only hope that, for whatever reason, whatever mechanism, that will change in the United States," he said.

"It shouldn't affect us and the whole of the rest of the world," he said, adding that everyone else was "absolutely clear" on the need for action.

Trump last week dismissed projections in a report from his own government that climate change will cause severe economic harm to the U.S. economy.

Attenborough, who has been broadcasting on the natural world since the 1950s, was on Monday the first holder of the "People's Seat" at the U.N. table.

Climate advocates and citizens with views on or experience of climate change were encouraged to use the social media hashtag #TakeYourSeat to feed comments into his opening-day address, and influence the global debate.

The broadcaster said U.N. conferences could seem remote, and the hashtag provided "a way in which people can get their feelings across to those who are taking decisions on their behalf".

He said he believed he had been chosen to launch the role because of his long experience of broadcasting, during which he has witnessed devastating change.

In particular, he mentioned coral reefs.

"If you're a naturalist or if you're not a naturalist, they are the most stunning things in the natural world," he said.

"It's a most magical manifestation of life ... and you go to a reef which has been bleached, and it's gone. All you see is that the coral is dead."

But now the young were demanding change.

"We have all been living beyond our means. It's a perfectly simple thing. We knew not what we did," he said.

"We have let down the young generation, and they know it, and they are angry."

(Additional reporting by Megan Rowling for the Thomson Reuters Foundation; Writing by Barbara Lewis; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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