'Climate Is a Common Good': Pope Francis Calls for Justice on Warming Planet
A message to leaders and supporters of the Roman Catholic Church by Pope Francis, cataloging the threat of climate change and the moral imperative to act aggressively to combat its root causes, is being heralded around the world on Thursday as a powerful—even ‘radical’—statement from one of the world’s most recognizable religious leaders.
“What makes the pope’s message so radical isn’t just his call to urgently tackle climate change. It’s the fact he openly and unashamedly goes against the grain of dominant social, economic and environment policies.”
—Steffen Böhm, Sustainability Institute at University of Essex
Released in the form of a 180-page Papal Encyclical (pdf)—a formal letter to all the bishops of the church—the document codifies an official message from the spiritual leader, who makes the case that acting on climate change is not just a matter of decreasing the amount of greenhouse gas emissions that are fueling global warming, but also involves addressing the inequities and injustices caused by the fossil fuel-driven economy and resulting climate change.
“This home of ours is being ruined and that damages everyone, especially the poor,” reads the pope’s message on the environment, climate, and social justice.
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The encyclical states:
Though a draft of the encyclical, leaked earlier this week, gave a sense of what Francis’ message would be, the Guardian notes that the document is “not only a moral call for action on phasing out the use of fossil fuels, as was expected,” but is also “infused with an activist anger and concern for the poor” that castigates “the indifference of the powerful,” including government leaders of the richest nations and the industrialists who profit most from the fossil fuel paradigm.
“The same mindset which stands in the way of making radical decisions to reverse the trend of global warming also stands in the way of achieving the goal of eliminating poverty.”
—Pope Francis
In his letter, Francis charges that the world’s most developed countries, which have benefited most from the use of coal, oil, and gas, owe a “grave social debt” to everyone else. “The developed countries ought to help pay this debt,” Francis states, “by significantly limiting their consumption of non-renewable energy and by assisting poorer countries to support policies and programs of sustainable development.”
In the letter, the pope chastises those who would ignore the growing crisis despite all the warnings from the scientific community and beyond. It continues:
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Though acknowledging his message is aimed at the bishops and followers of one specific church, secular advocates for climate justice and international campaign groups welcomed the message as a powerful statement from an undeniably influential and global voice.
As Kumi Naidoo, head of Greenpeace International, stated: “Everyone, whether religious or secular, can and must respond to this clarion call for bold urgent action.”
“Only when world leaders heed the Pope’s moral leadership on these two defining issues, inequality and climate change, will our societies become safer, more prosperous and more equal.”
—Winnie Byanyima, Oxfam International
And Lucy Cadena, climate justice campaigner for Friends of the Earth International, said her group welcomes the pope’s explicit connections between poverty, inequality and the need for climate justice. “Pope Francis is right to say that there is a moral imperative to act on climate change with the utmost urgency and ambition,” she said. “He is a friend of the earth and of the poorest and most vulnerable. Addressing climate change is a matter of justice: those who have contributed least to causing the crisis are suffering the greatest consequences.”
Nicholas Stern, the British economist and author of an influential report on climate change, said the pope’s encyclical was of “enormous significance” because it could guide other leaders to follow suit. “Moral leadership on climate change from the Pope,” Stern said on Thursday, “is particularly important because of the failure of many heads of state and government around the world to show political leadership.”
Declaring that the pope’s message, in fact, is addressed people of all faiths as well as those who do not adhere to any religion, Janet Redman, director of the climate program at the Institute for Policy Studies, said Francis has challenged “the entire human community to take an honest look at the foundations of our society that has created wealth for some at the expense of the planet. The Pope has drawn a significant connection between our individual responsibility to care for creation and for each other, and the way we build the global economy.”
And his message is “crystal clear,” argues Redman. “The current development model, based on the intensive use of coal, oil, and even natural gas, has to go,” she said. “In its place, we need renewable sources of energy and new modes of production and consumption that rein in global warming. Taxing carbon, divesting from fossil fuels, and ending public corporate welfare for polluters can help end the stranglehold dirty energy companies have on our governments, economies and societies.”
Many people, including author and activist Naomi Klein earlier this week, have expressed surprise and gratitude that Francis is willing to push boundaries by linking climate change and capitalism, the role of economic inequality, the machinations of consumerism, and the long-held (but largely ignored) demand that the global North owes the global South a significant social and financial debt when it comes to paying for the damage its done to the planet over the last hundred years or more.
As Steffen Böhm, director of the Sustainability Institute at University of Essex, notes, what makes the message “so radical isn’t just his call to urgently tackle climate change. It’s the fact he openly and unashamedly goes against the grain of dominant social, economic and environment policies.” Böhm praised the pope’s bold announcement, because “untainted by the realities of government and the greed of big business, he is perhaps the only major figure who can legitimately confront the world’s economic and political elites in the way he has.”
Speaking to the idea of what climate justice means in practice, Winnie Byanyima, international executive director of Oxfam International, said that because “gross and growing inequality between rich and poor has been made worse by the climate crisis” and “the emissions of the rich are driving weather extremes that hit the poorest hardest,” there is no other pathway than addressing both concerns as a single problem. According to Byanyima, “Only when world leaders heed the Pope’s moral leadership on these two defining issues, inequality and climate change, will our societies become safer, more prosperous and more equal.”
“The language of the climate justice movement has just been adopted by the pope.”
—Naomi Klein, author and activistIn the end, Böhm says the pope’s historical statement will help establish in the mind of the global population that the “time for bold, radical action on the environment as well as poverty eradication has come.”
To quote directly from the encyclical: “The same mindset which stands in the way of making radical decisions to reverse the trend of global warming also stands in the way of achieving the goal of eliminating poverty.”
Klein, who literally wrote the book on this subject and appeared on Democracy Now! Thursday morning to discuss Francis’ message, might be hard pressed to put it better. Perhaps most notable, she explained, is how closely the message that Francis has formalized as the church’s position corresponds to the critique articulated by activists and experts like herself. “The language of the climate justice movement has just been adopted by the pope,” she said.
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