Millions of people from 178 countries and territories were expected to take part in WWF's Earth Hour this year, organisers said, with monuments and buildings such as Berlin's Brandenburg Gate plunging into darkness for 60 minutes from 8:30 pm local time last night.
The annual event kicked off in Sydney, where the Earth Hour idea originated in 2007.
"We just saw the Sydney Harbour Bridge switch its lights off... And buildings around as well," Earth Hour's Australia manager Sam Webb told AFP from The Rocks area.
"From one city it has now grown to over 178 countries and territories and over 7,000 cities, so we couldn't be happier about how millions of people across the world are coming together for climate action," he told AFP from Singapore ahead of the lights out.
Over 150 buildings in Singapore dimmed their lights, while Taipei's 101 skyscraper gradually turned lights off for one hour and the city's four historical gates and bridges also went dark.
"Imagine being the manager of the only building in a major metropolis to forget," said one Twitter post alongside a picture of the PLA building lit up against a darkened skyline.
After Asia, Earth Hour shifted to Europe where St Peter's Basilica, Rome's Trevi Fountain and the Parthenon temple in Athens were among a slew of iconic sites to go off-grid.
In London, the lights were shut off at the Houses of Parliament, the London Eye, Tower Bridge, St Paul's Cathedral, Buckingham Palace and Harrods department store.
When New York's Empire State Building went dark, one New Yorker joked on Twitter "I was wondering why my skyline is black."
In Chile's capital, Santiago, the La Moneda presidential palace cut off its lighting for an hour, while in Mexico, the capital city's Monument to the Revolution went dark as well.
Meanwhile Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted a cozy photo of himself and his wife, illuminated only by candlelight, with a fireplace glowing in the background.
"We're all on this planet together. During #EarthHour and every day thereafter," he wrote.
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