Hear what Pope tells Buhari, other world leaders
Pope
Francis on Thursday urged the world to act quickly to prevent “extraordinary”
climate change from destroying the planet and said wealthy countries must bear
responsibility for creating the problem and for solving it. In a radically
worded letter addressed to every person on the planet, the leader of the
world’s 1.2 billion Catholics blames human greed for the critical situation
“Our Sister, mother Earth” now finds itself in.
Pope
Francis
“This
sister now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our
irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her,” he
writes in his long-anticipated Encyclical on the environment.
Arguing
that environmental damage is intimately linked to global inequality, he goes on
to say that doomsday predictions can no longer be dismissed and that: “The
earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth.”
Green
activists hailed the charismatic Argentinian pontiff’s widely-trailed
intervention as a potential game-changer in the debate over what causes global
warming and how to reverse it. “Everyone, whether religious or secular, can and
must respond to this clarion call for bold urgent action,”said Kumi Naido, the
International Executive Director of Greenpeace.
Environmentalists
hope the pope’s message will significantly increase the pressure for binding
restrictions on carbon emissions to be agreed at global talks in Paris at the
end of this year. But even before the official publication, climate change
sceptics had dismissed the document’s argument that the phenomenon is primarily
man-made and that humanity can reverse it through lifestyle changes including
an early phasing-out of fossil fuels.
“I
don’t get economic policy from my bishops or my cardinal or my pope,” US
presidential candidate Jeb Bush said on the eve of the release in comments that
underlined the depth of opposition in the United States to a binding agreement
to curb greenhouse gases.
Fast track to disaster
The
Encyclical references the arguments of the sceptics by acknowledging that
volcanic activity, variation in the earth’s movements and the solar cycle are
factors in climate change. But it maintains that “most global warming in recent
decades is due to the great concentration of greenhouse gases released mainly
as a result of human activity”.
President
Muhammadu Buhari
And
it leaves no doubt that Francis believes the world is on a fast-track to
disaster after decades of inaction. “If present trends continue, this century
may well witness extraordinary climate change and an unprecedented destruction
of ecosystems, with serious consequences for all of us,” he writes.
Bemoaning
the “remarkable” weakness of political responses to this, Francis accuses the
sceptics of cynically ignoring or manipulating the scientific evidence. “There
are too many special interests, and economic interests easily end up trumping
the common good and manipulating information so that their own plans will not
be affected,” he writes.
“We
know how unsustainable is the behaviour of those who constantly consume and
destroy, while others are not yet able to live in a way worthy of their human
dignity,” he adds, saying the time has come for parts of the world to accept
decreased growth.
Conflict and war
The
consequences of climate change, he argues, will include a rise in sea levels
that will directly threaten the quarter of the world’s population that lives
near or on coastlines, and will be felt most acutely by developing countries.
Highlighting warnings that acute water shortages could arise within decades, he
writes that, “the control of water by large multinational business may become a
major source of conflict in this century”.
He
adds: “It is foreseeable that, once certain resources have been depleted, the
scene will be set for new wars,” with the ever-present risk that nuclear or
biological weapons could be used. One of the strongest themes in the encyclical
is that rich countries must accept responsibility for having caused climate
change and should “help pay this debt” by cutting their carbon emissions and
helping the developing world adopt sustainable forms of energy generation.
“The
land of the southern poor is rich and mostly unpolluted, yet access to
ownership of goods and resources for meeting vital needs is inhibited by a
system of commercial relations and ownership which is structurally perverse,”
the pope writes in perhaps the most radical passage of the document.
Francis
says fossil fuel-based technology needs to be “progressively replaced without
delay.” Developing countries will need financial help to do this from
“countries which have experienced great growth at the cost of the ongoing
pollution of the planet” and this pact has to be enshrined in binding accords.




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