AP/ March 31, 2012, 7:33 PM

World landmarks dimmed for Earth Hour

Combo of images show before, left, and after pictures of St Stephen's Tower in London Saturday March 31, 2012, during Earth Hour. Earth Hour takes place worldwide at 8.30 p.m. local time and is a global call to turn off lights for 60 minutes in a bid to highlight the global climate change.

Combo of images show before, left, and after pictures of St Stephen's Tower in London Saturday March 31, 2012, during Earth Hour. Earth Hour takes place worldwide at 8.30 p.m. local time and is a global call to turn off lights for 60 minutes in a bid to highlight the global climate change. / Lewis Whyld),AP Photo/PA

Updated 9:32 PM ET

(AP) LONDON - Hundreds of world landmarks from Berlin's Brandenburg Gate to the Great Wall of China went dark Saturday, part of a global effort to highlight climate change.

Earth Hour, held on the last Saturday of March every year, began as a Sydney-only event in 2007. The city's iconic Harbor Bridge and Opera House were dimmed again this year.

Australia is among the first countries to flick off the light switches each year; in New Zealand, Sky Tower in Auckland and the parliament buildings in Wellington switched off two hours earlier; Tokyo Tower was also dimmed and in Hong Kong, buildings along Victoria Harbour also went dark. All the events take place at 8:30 p.m. local time.

6 Photos

Earth Hour 2012

The WWF, the global environmental group which organizes the event, said the number of countries and territories participating has grown from 135 last year to 147 this year.

"Global warming is a big issue," said Rudy Ko, of Taiwanese environmental group Society of Wilderness. "Everybody can help reduce the problem by turning the lights off."

Ko said children should invite their parents "to turn the lights off, go out, go to the parks to do some exercise, and enjoy some family time instead of watching TV or play video games."

In Europe, 5,000 candles were lit in the form of a globe in front of Berlin's Brandenburg Gate before city officials switched off the monument's lighting.

More than 230 monuments and major gathering points in Paris were expected to dim lights for an hour — including Notre Dame Cathedral, the Arc de Triomphe, as well as fountains and bridges over the Seine.

An exception: The Eiffel Tower, which the mayor's office said would go dark for only five minutes "for security reasons."

Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, Tower Bridge and St. Paul's Cathedral were among the other London landmarks to go dark. Managers at the Savoy hotel planned to light the lobby, bars and restaurants with candles.

"Let us stand together to make of our world a sustainable source for our future as humanity on this planet," the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory said in a tweet.

Across the Nordic nations, government buildings and municipalities joined in, including Stockholm's royal castle and the Swedish capital's huge globe-shaped sports arena. In Sweden's second-largest city, Goteborg, the main boulevard was bathed in an hour's darkness. People launched paper lanterns into the air in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Washington's National Cathedral and New York's Empire State Building also took part.

Libya, Algeria, Bhutan and French Guinea are among those participating for the first time.

"Earth Hour 2012 is a celebration of people power; the world's largest mass event in support of the planet," WWF official Dermot O'Gorman told reporters in Sydney.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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CarrieCapucine says:
Incredible to see the power we can have! Take a look at this great article http://www.frenchcultureguide.com/04/french-perspectives-on-earth-hour-nyc/ and keep going the experience as soon as you can. It is important to be aware of the planet's issues which can be partially solved thanks to us.
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Molly-Pchr says:
And again tomorrow how many will leave their cars running and running when they're in the deli getting coffee and complaining about gas prices, and how many truckers will leave their diesels running and running while they eat lunch, and how many will drive to the store a half mile away, leave the car running on line at the bank window, etc., et al, ad nauseam. America=pollution. Nobody cares. Not really. They really do not think about their children's future. They live for themselves, for today.
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moorsdouglas says:
the religion of earth worship continues on in spite of bad science, the president investing billions of our dollars in failed green energy plants. this is about redistribution of wealth, plan and simple. The earth's weather is cyclical. So much of this is crap. We should turn the lights off and close the door on this whole climate change garbage.
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audemus replies:
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If you draw any comfort in ignoring facts that are indeed quite scary, so be it....I guess that's understandable--but that does not change the truth that this planet is in trouble, nor excuse the fact that we have done this to ourselves.
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displeased2 says:
Wow, I'm so impressed. We can acknowledge climate change by turning off unnecessary lighting for 1 hour. Perhaps next year, we can shoot for 2 hours.
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