

Introduction
Naomi Seibt (born 18 August 2000) is a German climate change denier. She is employed by the conservative Heartland Institute, an American conservative and libertarian public policy think tank which markets her as the "anti-Greta" (referring to her younger environmental activist comparator from Sweden, Greta Thunberg). She has been a speaker at multiple events organized by conservative think tanks.
Early life
In a 19 February 2020 interview with Die Weltwoche, Seibt said that she had become interested in politics in 2015 when she was 14 years old and began to attend political events with her mother. At that time she was critical of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU). Seibt lives in suburb of Münster, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, with her sister and their mother, a lawyer, who according to The Guardian, "has represented politicians" from the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party.
Aged sixteen, she graduated in September 2017 fromGymnasium St. Mauritz Bischöfl, a Catholic high school. Whilst attending that school she earned first place in physics during a local regional version of the Jugend forscht, in the junior division called "Students experiment", and second in mathematics.
Career
When Seibt was sixteen, her poem "Sometimes I keep silent" on nationalism, was published on David Berger's "anti-Islamisation" blog Philosophia Perennis, as part of an AfD competition.
Since May 2019, Seibt has typically recorded YouTube videos using her mobile phone on topics ranging from "migration to feminism to climate change". In them, she called herself a "climate realist".
On 4 November 2019, the Süddeutsche Zeitung, one of Germany's largest daily newspapers, described her appearance at the end of the European Institute for Climate and Energy (EIKE)'s annual "International Climate and Energy Conference" held in Munich on 2 November, saying, "They have their own Greta. A climate change denier Greta." In her speech, Seibt said that before she started questioning a lot of things, like feminism and cultural socialism, she too was a "climate alarmist".
On 3 December 2019 Seibt spoke as an invited guest at the Madrid "Climate Reality Forum", a forum organized to rebut the United Nations' climate change warnings, while Greta Thunberg spoke at the 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP25) several miles away. In 2019, Germany's AfD had embraced climate change denial as part of their political campaign in Europe, and were therefore, also aligned with EIKE. She was the only woman invited to speak at an event that is "traditionally dominated by older men".
Seibt has previously spoken at The Heartland Institute, and at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Maryland, Seibt spoke to about a hundred conservatives. Seibt dismisses allegations that she is a "puppet of the right wing or the climate deniers or the Heartland Institute either."
She has stated that,
The goal [of climate scientists] is to shame humanity. Climate change alarmism at its very core is a despicably anti-human ideology and we are told to look down at our achievements with guilt, with shame and disgust, and not even to take into account the many major benefits we have achieved by using fossil fuels as our main energy source.”
A 28 February 2020 article in The Guardian said that Seibt was inspired by the alt-right, white nationalist Stefan Molyneux, after being introduced to his blogs. She has also been accused of both white nationalism and antisemitism due to her support for some on the Alt-right. She has denied this.
Image
Seibt has aligned herself as a paid conservative blogger that is being promoted as 'Anti-Greta', in response to Greta Thunberg, aligning herself with the Alternative for Germany (AfD) This image has been further propogated by The Heartland Institute comparing her to Greta in promotional anti-climate change campaigns. She self-identifies as a libertarian
A 2020 joint investigation by Correctiv and Frontal21 revealed that the Heartland Institute's James Taylor considered Seibt to be the star of their "media strategy for the masses", in their "fight against climate protection measures" which "needs a better image"—to "move away from old white men and instead showcase a younger generation."
Media
The Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ) described Seibt as a "right-wing Youtuber" who "attacks climate science in her videos". The Guardian described her as a "so-called" "YouTube influencer".
In an interview with the Post, the director of the Digital Forensic Research Lab, Graham Brookie commented on Seibt's approach to Thunberg's message on climate, in which she counters Thunberg's "I want you to panic", by saying in a video posted on Heartland's website, that "I don't want you to panic. I want you to think." Brookie said, while it "is not outright disinformation, it does bear resemblance to a model we use called the 4d's — dismiss the message, distort the facts, distract the audience, and express dismay at the whole thing. The tactic is intended to create an equivalency in spokespeople and message. In this case, it is a false equivalency between a message based in climate science that went viral organically and a message based in climate skepticism trying to catch up using paid promotion."