Iceland elects 41-year-old environmentalist as prime minister

Authored by inhabitat.com and submitted by radical_vegan

Katrin Jakobsdottir, the 41-year-old chairwoman of the Left-Green Movement, has been elected Prime Minister of Iceland. One of the most well-liked politicians in Iceland, Jakobsdottir, a former education minister and avowed environmentalist, has pledged to set Iceland on the path to carbon neutrality by 2040. As Iceland’s fourth prime minister in only two years, Jakobsdottir will take office at a time when national politics have been tainted by public distrust and scandal. A democratic socialist, Jakobsdottir is viewed as a bridge-building leader that may lead the country towards positive, incremental change. “She is the party leader who can best unite voters from the left and right,” said Eva H. Onnudottir, a political scientist at the University of Iceland, according to the New York Times. “Because this coalition includes parties from the left to the right, their work will be more about managing the system instead of making ‘revolutionary’ changes.”

Since forming its governing coalition, Jakobsdottir’s Left-Green party has already taken bold steps to assert its environmentalism. Rather than appointing a party member of parliament, the Left-Greens have picked Guðmundur Ingi Guðbrandsson, environmental activist and CEO of Landvernd, the largest nature conservation and environmental NGO in Iceland, to serve as Minister of the Environment. The government’s new coalition is expected to continue the work to address climate change began under previous administrations.

Related: Iceland’s “Thor” volcano power plant can generate 10X more energy than oil or gas wells

While climate change has proven to be somewhat of a boost for Iceland’s tourism industry, which welcomed approximately 2.2 million visitors in 2017, the nation of just over 300,000 recognizes the importance of shifting to a clean energy economy and preparing for disruptive changes in the coming decades. Iceland’s climate change action plan involves shifting to clean energy in transportation by improving infrastructure for electric cars, planting more trees, and sourcing all energy for public institutions from renewable sources.

Images via Wikimedia (2, 3, 4, 5) Flickr and Depositphotos (2, 3, 4)

Kristinnh on December 6th, 2017 at 00:06 UTC »

Icelander here and a former supporter of her party, I think we need to keep our optimism in check. The other two parties in the coalition are the biggest supporters of industry and agriculture (sheep farming) and they will be placing as many roadblocks as possible to secure their interests. Also, the average Icelander is oddly uninformed about environmental causes. We have all this clean energy and use it mostly to produce aluminium and so on. There are so many things wrong and the pushback will be hard. If she wants to keep the coalition together for 4 years, her party will have to put quite a few issues on the backburner.

automatics1im on December 5th, 2017 at 23:27 UTC »

May she be competent and effectual.

Mohamedhijazi22 on December 5th, 2017 at 22:59 UTC »

Good on you iceland