180 Countries Go Lights Out for Earth Hour

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March 26, 2018

Eight more countries turned out the lights for Earth Hour in its 11th year.

The iconic lights-out-for-an-hour event designed to call attention to humans' dependence on electricity (and the burning of fossil fuels to feed that dependency) and to the growing problem of global warming had tens of millions of people in 180 countries and territories around the world taking part, according to event organizer World Wide Fund for Nature.

Participants and observers reported darkness at iconic world sites like the Empire State Building, United Nations headquarters, Big Ben, the London Eye, the Eiffel Tower, the Brandenburg Gate, the Kremlin, the Burj Khalifa, Rio's Christ the Redeemer statue, the Sony Building, the Giza Pyramids, and the Acropolis, along with many more lesser well known places.

Joining the lights-out list was the Opera House in Sydney, Australia, where Earth Hour originated in 2007, as a small movement with a working title of "The Big Flick." San Francisco joined Sydney in that first year; the very next year, people in 35 countries got onboard. The number of people and countries participating has increased every year, even as the date for the annual event has changed.

On March 24, 2018, Sydney starting the rolling blackout at 8:30 p.m. Sydney time. The effort rolled on eastward from there. Many places kept the lights off for the entire hour. Some, like the Eiffel Tower, switched off for just a few minutes.

Gurgaon, India, featured a Pedal for the Planet cyclothon, during which hundreds of people rode their bicycles for at least 5 kilometers (3 miles).

One country took the opportunity to set a world record as well. Jordan's Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature put 11,440 candles on an Amman hilltop, creating the world's largest candle mosaic. The candles spelled out the Earth Hour motto: 60+.

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Social Studies for Kids
copyright 2002–2017
David White

Social Studies for Kids
copyright 2002–2019
David White