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The Future Super team at the 2019 climate strike. Source: supplied.
More than 380 business leaders, including the heads of Atlassian and Canva, are again supporting their staff to walk out this afternoon to join students on the School Strike 4 Climate.
The businesses are getting behind the Not Business as Usual movement, spearheaded by green super fund Future Super, and its founder and chief Simon Sheikh.
According to Sheikh, the support is indicative of a shifting culture in the tech sector, and the changing expectations of employees.
Today’s action follows a similar strike in September 2019, intended to alert the federal government to the concerns of young people around climate change.
(Photo by Dan Kitwood, Getty Images)
Thousands of school students will take to the streets to protest government inaction on the climate crisis this Friday.
The Australia-wide protests mark the first school climate strike since the start of the pandemic last year.
The events are backed by strong support from Australian tech and business leaders including Atlassian and Canva.
Following a Federal Budget which left the climate agenda for dead, thousands of school children are protesting government inaction on climate change, receiving vocal support from an extensive list of Australian businesses.
The protests, which will take place across Australia, mark the first school climate strike since the start of the pandemic last year and are particularly focused on the federal government’s new funding for gas-fired power.