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Smoke billows from a plant in 2015 at sunset in Wismar, Germany.
Smoke billows from a plant in 2015 at sunset in Wismar, Germany.
Photo Credit: Daniel Reinhardt | EPA

Catholic groups pledge to make Church’s voice heard at climate conference

WARSAW, Poland — As government delegations from across the globe prepare for a Dec. 2-14 U.N. conference on climate change, Catholic organizations are pledging to make the Church’s voice heard.

CIDSE, a network of 17 Catholic development agencies from Europe and North America based in Brussels, joined other Catholic aid organizations in Katowice, Poland, for the 24th U.N. Climate Change Conference, which was expected to propose measures for restricting temperature increases to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

“Over the past year, there have been fears of a loss of energy — that ambition and commitment are being deflated by the magnitude of the tasks ahead,” said Josianne Gauthier, CIDSE secretary-general. “But we’ve been called out by the world’s most vulnerable countries to make the bold changes needed to restrict global warming — not by seeking the lowest common denominator, but by joining in courageous actions.”

Gauthier, a Catholic from Canada, said Nov. 26 that Catholic campaigners would press the conference to maintain a “comprehensive rights approach to climate change,” rather than merely focusing on “technical questions.”

Adriana Opromolla, international advocacy officer for Caritas Internationalis, the Vatican-based federation of 164 Catholic charities, said Catholic groups “want an open, transparent dialogue on the global common good, not just a preoccupation with the interests of certain countries.”

“While governments have to comply with global emission reduction goals, actors below government level can also have a major impact with a shared vision for reversing current trends,” said Opromolla. “What absolutely cannot happen is that we just continue with business as usual.”

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, and Cardinal Peter Turkson, prefect of the Dicastery for the Promoting Integral Human Development, will lead a delegation from the Holy See.

In a statement Oct. 26, Church leaders from five continents called for the conference to be a “milestone on the path set out in 2015,” by encouraging “urgency, intergenerational justice, human dignity and human rights.”

They added that Pope Francis had demanded “rapid and radical changes” in his 2015 encyclical “Laudato Si’, on Care for our Common Home.” They called on countries with heavy carbon emissions to “take political accountability and meet their climate finance commitments.”

According to the statement, the Catholic Church worldwide was now supporting a “shift toward more sustainable communities and lifestyles,” including disinvestment from fossil fuels in favor of renewable energy, and was “rethinking the agriculture sector” to promote agro-ecology.

“We must resist the temptation to look for solutions to our current situation in short-term technological fixes without addressing the root causes and the long-term consequences,” said the signers, who included Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Mumbai, president of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences, and Cardinal Ruben Salazar Gomez of Bogota, Colombia, president of the Latin American bishops’ council. Their counterparts from Europe, Africa and Oceania also signed the letter.

According to a statement on the U.N. website, the conference’s main objective would be to adopt implementation guidelines for the 1.5-degree limit adopted under a 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement.

It added that the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had recently warned net carbon dioxide emissions must reach zero by 2050 to meet the Paris target, thus reducing “the risks to human well-being, ecosystems and sustainable development.”

In a Nov. 22 report, the Geneva-based World Meteorological Organization said levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, had reached a new record high, driving increases in sea levels, ocean acidification and more extreme weather, with “no sign of a reversal in the trend.”

A separate Nov. 27 emissions report by the U.N. Environment Programme tracked policy commitments by countries to reduce emissions and said these were trailing behind official targets.

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