Here
are five key quotes from the encyclical that will shake up the global climate
debate.
Pope Francis just released an “encyclical,” a fancy word for a
sort of intimate letter that is meant to serve as a guide to understanding our
personal relationship to some of the most complex issues of the day through
religious doctrine.
This particular encyclical is on climate change and is addressed not just to the globe’s 1.2 billion Catholics but to everyone of any — or no — faith.
In it, Pope Francis boldly challenges us all to take an honest look inside our hearts and question the foundations of a society that has created wealth for some at the expense of others and “our common home” – the planet earth.
This particular encyclical is on climate change and is addressed not just to the globe’s 1.2 billion Catholics but to everyone of any — or no — faith.
In it, Pope Francis boldly challenges us all to take an honest look inside our hearts and question the foundations of a society that has created wealth for some at the expense of others and “our common home” – the planet earth.
Here are five key quotes from the encyclical that will shake up the global climate
debate.
#1. Climate change and inequality are inextricably linked.
“Today, however, we have to realize that a true ecological approach always becomes a social approach; it must integrate questions of justice in debates on the environment, so as to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor.”
It’s not hard to see how climate change hits people living in
poverty first and worst, and inevitably widens the gulf between rich and poor.
After extreme weather washes away their homes or drought kills their crops, those living in poverty have a harder time bouncing back than those with savings accounts and sturdier houses.
But what’s really radical is how the Pope names inequality itself as an impediment to solving a looming planetary and human rights crisis. The encyclical calls out “masters of power and money” to stop masking the symptoms and address climate change in service of the common good.
After extreme weather washes away their homes or drought kills their crops, those living in poverty have a harder time bouncing back than those with savings accounts and sturdier houses.
But what’s really radical is how the Pope names inequality itself as an impediment to solving a looming planetary and human rights crisis. The encyclical calls out “masters of power and money” to stop masking the symptoms and address climate change in service of the common good.
#2. The global economy must protect the Earth, our common home.
“The economy accepts every advance in technology with a view to profit, without concern for its potentially negative impact on human beings.”
Today’s global economy profits at the environment’s expense. And
the pursuit of growth is fueling environmental degradation, natural disasters,
and financial crises. Pope Francis envisions a people-and-planet-first economy
more in harmony with the environment that would prevent imbalances of wealth
and power and foster peace among nations.
#3. Everyone must divest from fossil fuels and invest in the
future.
“We know that technology based on the use of highly polluting fossil fuels … needs to be progressively replaced without delay.”
Pope Francis is crystal clear that the current development model
based on the intensive use of coal, oil and even natural gas, has to go. In its
place we need renewable energy options and new modes of production and
consumption that combat global warming.
This is precisely what a growing
movement of students, faith communities, socially responsible investors and
everyday citizens are calling on individuals and private and public
institutions to do: Divest their
money from fossil fuels and invest it in climate solutions like wind, solar,
and energy efficiency.
#4. It’s time for powerful nations to pay their fair share.
“A true ‘ecological debt’ exists, particularly between the global north and south … In different ways, developing countries, where the most important reserves of the biosphere are found, continue to fuel the development of richer countries at the cost of their own present and future.”
Countries in the global North have benefitted from fossil
fuel-driven industrialization, while developing countries bear the brunt of the
related greenhouse gas emissions. So, while everyone must act to avoid climate
disruption, rich countries have a greater responsibility.
For starters, they
must make rapid, deep cuts in carbon emissions. And they have to keep their
promise to finance the cost for poorer countries to build climate resilience
and transition renewable energy through the Green Climate
Fund.
#5. There’s no easy way out of this.
“Obstructionist attitudes, even on the part of believers, can range from denial of the problem to indifference, nonchalant resignation or blind confidence in technical solutions.”
There’s only one way to meet the climate challenge: Extinguish
the “dig, burn, dump economy.” And markets and technology can’t be relied on to
do the job. Gimmicks like trading carbon credits as a financial commodity or
burning coal in “cleaner” power plants are distractions from the only real
solution: Stop digging up and drilling — then burning — oil, gas, and coal.
Pope Francis is calling for solutions to climate change that is
rooted in our “deepest convictions about love, justice, and peace.” His letter
to the world illuminates a radical, compassionate path that shows what it truly
means to have faith in humanity.
Janet Redman is the director of the Climate Policy Program at
the Institute for Policy Studies.