Lights are off but everyone's in: Thousands of cities and towns
around the world join in the big switch off as part of annual green
campaign Earth Hour
More than 7,000 towns
and cities across the globe are plunging themselves into darkness to
mark Earth Hour, an annual event coordinated by the World Wide Fund for
Nature (WWF) to raise awareness of climate change and other
environmental causes.
People were encouraged to switch off all their lights for an hour from 8.30pm today, local time.
World centres like Shanghai and Sydney were among the first to flick the switches off, with Britain, France and the rest of Western Europe joining in later, followed by North America, where New York City and Las Vegas flipped the switch for a good cause.
Crossroads of the world: Large billboards are black in Times Square during Earth Hour in New York, Saturday
Where's it gone? Paris's iconic Eiffel Tower had
its lights shut down for the global event - though much of the rest of
the French capital carried on around it
Plunged into darkness: People stand illuminated
before Berlin's Brandenberg Gate for Earth Hour. The campaign sees
lights go out at 8.30pm
The light shines in the darkness, and the
darkness has not overcome it: St Peter's Basilica in Rome's Vatican City
loses its floodlighting to mark Earth Hour
The light shines in the darkness, and the
darkness has not overcome it: St Peter's Basilica in Rome's Vatican City
loses its floodlighting to mark Earth Hour
Disappearing church: The cathedral in Cologne before and after the lights were switched off for Earth Hour
Major landmarks took part in
the event - in the UK Big Ben, the House of Parliament, Buckingham
Palace, Tower Bridge, The London Eye, Edinburgh Castle, Brighton Pier,
Durham Cathedral and Windsor Castle all going dark.
WWF
estimate that 10million people across the UK will take part and the
charity have roped in a host of celebrities to front the campaign,
including Amanda Holden, Jack Whitehall, Stephen Fry and Eliza
Doolittle.
The Singapore-leg
of the campaign also drew in starpower, with stars of upcoming
blockbuster The Amazing Spiderman 2, Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and
Jamie Foxx, leading ceremonies at the city-state's Marina Bay district.
The comic-book hero Spiderman, played by Garfield in the film, is this year's Earth Hour ambassador.
Sydney's
Opera House and Harbour Bridge were among the first landmarks around
the world to dim their lights for 60 minutes during Saturday's event.
New
York City's iconic Times Square was plunged into darkness, along with
the Empire State Building, while in Las Vegas, Nevada, The High Roller
Ferris Wheel at The LINQ hotel was temporarily deprived of its throng of
alluring multi-colored lights.
Before and after: The Azadi (Freedom) tower is illuminated (left) before the lights were turned off (right) during the worldwide Earth Hour in Tehran, Iran
As the time struck 8.30pm, the temple, in Bangkok, was draped in darkness
Hong Kong's stunning waterfront
skyline was unrecognisable, with the city's tallest skyscraper, the
International Commerce Centre, stripped of the vast light show usually
wrapped around its 118 stories.
Blazing
neon signs advertising some of the world's largest brands were shut
off, leaving the view of the heavily vertical southern Chinese city
peppered only with tiny lights from buildings' interiors.
Earth
Hour partnered with payments giant PayPal to allow donors to contribute
to specific projects from Russia and India to Canada and Indonesia,
using Asian fundraising site Crowdonomic.
Earth
Hour chief executive Andy Ridley said before the lights went off in
Singapore that the event had moved beyond symbolism to concrete action.
'If you want to get real social change you need to have symbolism,' he told AFP.
'We are seeing some really big outcomes.'
Projects under the Earth Hour
Blue crowdfunding scheme - which aim to raise more than $650,000 in
total - include a turtle centre in Italy and funding for forest rangers
in Indonesia.
The
projects seeking crowdfunding include a $24,000 effort in the
Philippines to bring fibreglass boat technology to coastal communities
affected by super typhoon Haiyan in November last year.
In
Nepal, $100,000 is being sought for a programme called A Flame Called
Hope to provide access to biogas energy for 150 households in the Terai
region, reducing the need for wood as fuel and helping protect the
habitat of endangered wildlife, according to the Earth Hour website.
Spiderman-2 star Garfield told journalists that he was a personal supporter of the Nepal project.
'What
they are doing is turning waste into energy, it's like the cycle of
life right there, if only everyone knew how simple it was,' he said.
Shareen
Brown, Earth Hour Manager at WWF-UK said: 'The countdown has well and
truly begun as millions of people prepare to join the Earth Hour
celebrations. From Samoa to Tahiti - and everywhere in between - it’s
really inspiring to see that so many people want to take action to
protect our beautiful planet.
'What’s really exciting is the
impact that this is having. Last year 10 million people took part in
the UK and 82 per cent of those that signed up said they felt inspired
to go on to live more sustainably beyond the hour. Globally we also saw
the world’s first Earth Hour forest created in Uganda and more than
100,000 people supported a petition on forest legislation in Russia.
'We hope that Earth Hour 2014 inspires more people than ever to do their bit for the planet.'
The
first country to take part in this year's event was Samoa, which hit
8.30pm while it was only 6.30am in London. The wave of darkness then
followed the world's timezones to sweep through Bangkok, Chicago, Hong
Kong, Istanbul, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, London, Manila, Mexico City, New
York City, Paris, Singapore, Sydney and Toronto, before finally ending
in Tahiti (at 6.30am tomorrow in London).
Earth
Hour was launched in Australia in 2007 and has grown to become the
world's largest environmentally focused event. Last year, 7,000 towns
and cities from 154 countries took part.
It's
not just on the streets of the world's towns and cities that Earth Hour
is having an impact. Search engine Google is also supporting the
campaign by turning its home page black for an hour. The company uses
its geo-location capabilities to work out where in the world you are
accessing the internet and then, if it's between 8.30pm and 9.30pm local
time it shows the special page.
Hollywood stars Emma Stone and Andrew Garfield,
left, and pop star Sophie Ellis-Bextor, right, are just some of the
celebrities WWF roped in to support Earth Hour
The China World Trade Center Tower III after the
switch off. The World Wide Fund for Nature hopes the campaign will
raise awareness of climate change
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2592304/Lights-everyones-Thousands-cities-towns-world-join-big-switch-annual-green-campaign-Earth-Hour.html#ixzz2xXxhbDkV
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