Pupils from around the United Kingdom went "on strike" on Friday as part of a global campaign for action on climate change.

Photo: WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/ AFP

Students around the country walked out of schools to call on the government to declare a climate emergency and take steps to tackle the problem.

The organisers, Youth Strike 4 Climate, said protests took place in more than 60 towns and cities, with an estimated 15,000 taking part.

They carried placards, some reading: "There is no planet B."

'Why we skipped school'

The action was part of a wider global movement, known as Schools 4 Climate Action.

It began with 15-year-old Swede Greta Thunberg skipping class to sit outside government buildings in September, accusing her country of not following the Paris Climate Agreement.

Since then, tens of thousands of children across Belgium, Germany, Sweden, Switzerland and Australia have been inspired to hold their own demonstrations.

The biggest protests were held in London, Brighton, Oxford and Exeter, the UK Student Climate Network said.

The group, which helped coordinate the protests, has four key demands - the government should declare a "climate emergency", it should inform the public about the seriousness of the situation, the national curriculum should be reformed to include "the ecological crisis", and the age of voting should be lowered to 16 so younger people can be involved in decision-making on environmental issues.

Greta tweeted about the UK protests, writing: "British PM says that the children on school strike are 'wasting lesson time'. That may well be the case.

"But then again, political leaders have wasted 30 yrs of inaction. And that is slightly worse."

Photo: WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/ AFP

A Downing Street spokeswoman said that, while it was important for young people to engage with issues like climate change, the disruption to planned lesson time was damaging for pupils.

The National Association of Head Teachers said it did not condone children missing school to take part in the action and that "nothing is more important than a child's education".

It said "individual school leaders can decide how best to respond" to any protests involving its students.

However, energy minister Claire Perry said she was "incredibly proud" of young people's passion and concern.

"I suspect if this was happening 40 years ago, I would be out there too," she said.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said schoolchildren were "right to feel let down by the generation before them", while Green Party MP Caroline Lucas said it was the "most hopeful thing that's happened in years".

Ms Lucas addressed campaigners in Brighton, saying they should be allowed to miss school because of "exceptional circumstances".

"The time for talking is over, and time for action is now," she said.

In London, 15-year-old Christina said the issue was too big to ignore.

"A lot of us are very good, obedient students but when it comes to climate change, it's really important," she said.

"The youth of our time tend to get pushed to one side. We often stay quiet, but when it comes to climate change we are going to have to pay for the older generation's mistakes."

Scarlet, 15, from Suffolk, is part of the UK Student Climate Network.

"We want the UK government to declare a climate emergency and make moves to achieve climate justice, prioritising this above all else," she said.

"We're demanding the government listen to us and we will continue to make a noise until they do so.

"It can't be about behaviour change any more; it has to be about system change."

Teenagers brandishing brightly-coloured posters packed Parliament Square chanting "save our planet".

Many were keen to point out it is their generation who will be left to pick up the pieces of our civilisation's waste and pollution.

They don't feel the government is listening to scientists' warnings on climate change. Without a vote, protests like this one are their only option, they say.

Photo: WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/ AFP

Some climbed onto statues but were quickly ordered down by police.

The organisers had planned a revision session to show the protestors take their education seriously but instead, shortly after noon, some of the teenagers, sat down on a crossing, blocking traffic.

Again they moved on quickly, but took an unplanned walk up Whitehall. Most of the protesters left the square and marched to Downing Street.

The protest was good-humoured, but the organisers' plans were abandoned.

Small groups staged sit-down protests across junctions, surrounding buses, shouting "engines off" at drivers and climbing traffic lights. As police dispersed one group another would form. I saw one young man arrested for obstruction - but he said he was not a student.

Hundreds of young protesters chanted for climate justice in Cambridge.

A protest was held in Belfast, where students walked out of schools to attend a demonstration at the City Hall.

In Wales, hundreds of primary and secondary school pupils descended on the Welsh Assembly in Cardiff Bay.

Meanwhile in the Scottish Highlands, pupils staged hour-long walkouts outside their school gates.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon backed youngsters taking part, saying it was a "cause for optimism in an often dark world".

Scotland Yard said two arrests were made in London. A 19-year-old man was arrested for obstructing a highway while a 17-year-old was arrested for a public order offence.

Another nationwide protest has been planned for 15 March.

- BBC