Tag Archives: Climate change

Cardinal Rodriguez at Durban climate talks

Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez meeting a local parish outside Durban on a visit to see the work of Caritas South Africa. Credit Patrick Nicholson

By Patrick Nicholson

Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez of Honduras met UN officials today as talks in Durban on climate change continued. The Cardinal is representing Caritas Internationalis at the UNFCCC meeting along with Caritas members from South Africa, Kenya, Bangladesh, and the British Isles.

Some 25,000 government officials, lobbyists and scientists are expected to attend the two-week conference that is seeking a new deal to follow the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.

Cardinal Rodriguez met with UNFCCC Chief of Staff Daniele Violetti to discuss the impact of climate change on the world’s poor and the importance of faith leaders in mobilising support for action. Violletti stressed the importance of bottom-up pressure from civil society and faith groups in combating climate change.

This Sunday, Pope Benedict XVI’s called for delegates at the climate talks to agree a responsible and credible deal to cut greenhouse gases.

“I hope that all members of the international community agree on a responsible and credible response to this worrisome and complex phenomenon, taking into account the needs of the poorest and future generations,” said the Pope at the Sunday Angelus in Rome.

In Durban, Cardinal Wilfred Napier told a special Mass on Sunday that the season of Advent offered hope of a new beginning and that the Durban conference also held out hope for a new start for humanity if delegates seized the chance with a new deal.

Before catching his plane to Durban on Monday, Cardinal Rodriguez led a group of Italian teenagers to meet Pope Benedict. The Pope asked them to be the “true guardians of life and creation”. He said, “Respect for the human being and respect for nature are one.”

Cardinal Rodriguez reflected the concerns and message of the Pope in meetings Tuesday, saying the science was clear on the damage climate change will cause and the first-hand experience of Caritas staff in emergencies shows the poor will suffer the greatest. What is missing, he said, is political will.

Caritas is calling for a legally binding deal that will put in place the cuts in greenhouse gases necessary and the financing to help poor country’s adapt to the worst consequences.

A deal is in the balance as delegates argues over who cuts first and deepest and how to pay to support developing countries.

Delegates from developing countries repeated the need for a multilateral legally binding agreement, but a post-Kyoto deal received a blow with Canada announcing Canada’s announcement that it would not accept further emission cuts under the treaty.

Later in the day, Cardinal Rodriguez and a group of Caritas representatives from various countries visited a local parish in nearby Kwa Mashu that is supported by Caritas South Africa. They heard pleas from people about the need for a deal at the climate talks and how floods and bad weather were affecting them.

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Video from the climate change rally in South Africa

Joseph Kabiru of CAFOD talks about African perspectives on climate change at the We Have Faith rally (Durban, 28/11/2011)

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Oceania feeling the brunt of climate change

Caritas colleagues Bobby Newsome and Christina Ma'afu greet each other with the traditional Maori Hongi

by Martin de Jong, Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand

Against a backdrop of severe drought across the central Pacific, Caritas Oceania representatives from eight different nations gathered in Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand earlier this month for their annual forum.

About 25 people attended the week-long event, including representatives from Caritas Internationalis, and Catholic Relief Services (CRS) – Asia. Many of the states represented, such as Tonga and Kiribati, are among the most vulnerable to climate change due to their low-lying nature or vulnerable shorelines.

A closing statement from the forum said its members stand ‘in solidarity with the poor and marginalized of the region. We are particularly concerned by the impact of climate change in our area.’ Continue reading

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Road to Rio

UN NGO conference in Bonn. Credit: UNV

Caritas Internationalis Delegate Joseph Cornelius Donnelly reports from Bonn.

How do we share responsibilities, hold one another mutually accountable to protect, preserve and share the precious gifts of the Earth?

This is the key question for 2000 participants from around the world in Bonn for a United Nations Department of Public Affairs/Non-Governmental (NGO) conference.

The meeting is part of the build up to a major international conference on sustainable development next June in Brazil. The Rio+20 conference will take place 20 years after the historic Earth Summit in Brazil in June 1992. The Brazilian government is preparing its RIO+20 document for submission to the UN in November. Its National Commission is also working on the role civil society and NGOs will have in Rio.

Governments signed up to a far reaching plan of action to curb human impact on the environment at the Earth Summit called Agenda 21. The plan has failed. Here in Bonn, there is a search for the priority issues to give global attention to in Brazil next year June. What is clear in Bonn is that there is a huge energy to overcome the challenges.

There is a need to look beyond 2012. We must think 2020. We need to look at new global indicators.  We must build ‘community-wise’ sustainability. We must look at the environment not just from a scientific and finance view point, but from a justice perspective too.

And not everything on the green economy for sustainable societies needs to be new.

Twenty years after Rio, why is this so tough to sell. We can’t claim ignorance anymore. Is it sustained indifference? It’s probably up to each of us, each nation and each community, multiplying our green potential.

I’m present in Bonn as a Caritas Internationalis delegate along with colleagues from Caritas Germany. I am also in dialogue with members and colleagues from Rome, Kampala, Montreal, Jerusalem, New Zealand, Tokyo, Bogotá, London, Freiburg, Geneva,  Sydney, Washington and beyond.

Our Caritas conversation is essential regarding climate change, food security, sustainability, civic energies holding leaders accountable, as well as ourselves. As great leaders have said through history: we must be precise on the very changes we advocate for all. We are necessary parts of the long-awaited solutions. We must ask ourselves just how “green” are we?

We can be quite sure – it matters much to many that Caritas is here, that our local and global investments are deliberately green. It matters that Caritas priorities are fully focused on one human family for integrated human development, aid effectiveness and implementation of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The MDGs are a series of anti-poverty targets agreed by most governments. The final goal covers global partnerships. Caritas said at the UN General Assembly in 2005 that NGOs are a critical window and without such input the global dialogue risks being incomplete. Part of our role is to grow this one human family with its call for zero poverty. Such solidarity never falls from the sky. It rises up from our Caritas roots where we know local is global and will be part of our common journey to Rio+20.

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Cancun climate conference: UN process key winner

By Cliona Sharkey, Trócaire

On my way to Mexico two weeks ago I was reflecting on the differences between the prospects for the Cancun meeting and the level of expectation in the run up to the Copenhagen summit last year.  Sitting in the airport on my way home I find myself comparing the day the gavel went down last year with the atmosphere today, the day the Cancun conference closed.  Thankfully, the mood couldn’t be more different. On substance, however, you have to look at the detail to assess what progress has been made.. Continue reading

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Cancun climate summit: A sign of hope for creation

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis Director of Policy, at the climate conference in Cancun,

We need to thoroughly assess the outcome of the summit in detail, but there seems to be a sign of hope. In all the statements to be heard by high level officials it was acknowledged that now is time for action.

Checking against our own targets, adequate funding for the most vulnerable communities and a fair and legally binding deal under the UNFCCC that builds on the Kyoto protocol, some elements seem to have been achieved. A Climate Fund and agreement to keep global temperature below 2° C compared to pre-industrial levels.

Most importantly apparently Mexico set a spirit of seriousness and transparency which provided for a lifeline for future negotiations.

You have negotiated all my lifetime said a 21-year old girl from a youth organization in the concluding plenary and you do not have the authority to ask for more time. There seems to be hope that she sees concrete steps to tackle climate change during her life.

It seems that the many voices from civil society and faith-based organisations present at the summit have reached the hearts and minds of the leaders and negotiators. Bishop Gustavo Rodriguez Vega, President of Caritas Mexico speaking on behalf of the faith based organizations called for climate justice and for courageous, equitable and binding agreements. It seems that his call was not totally in vain.

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Cancun climate conference: Response to the Cancun Agreements

CAFOD (Caritas England and Wales) response to the Cancun Agreements

CAFOD’s head of policy Gwen Barry said: “Cancun has shown people whose lives depend on these negotiations that the world is serious about preventing devastating climate change. The gains made here in Mexico lay the foundations for action towards a legally binding agreement that could safeguard the future for our children and grandchildren.

“It is a credit to the Mexican presidency of the COP that they created the political space for meaningful negotiation. After the damaging adversarial tone of Copenhagen and Tianjin they have offered us glimpses of a political dynamic that could successfully tackle climate change. The collective spirit of multi-lateralism that filled the last hours of Cancun engendered a level of compromise that saw even recalcitrant nations find room for flexibility.

“But Japan, the US, Russia and Canada – and any nation that did not come to Cancun with ambitious mandates - must be reminded that when the present economic crisis has ended, climate change will still be gathering pace.  And with each year that passes without a globally binding agreement to cut emissions and finance poor countries’ needs to adapt to climate change and develop low-carbon economies, the impacts will become more and more severe. Continue reading

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Cancun climate summit: A Plea for Immediate Action

Bishop Gustavo Rodríguez Vega addresses the Cancun climate change meeting

Caritas Mexico President Bishop Gustavo Rodriguez Vega presented the following to the UNFCCC meeting in Cancun on behalf of the World Council of Churches.

English |Spanish

A Plea for Immediate Action

“No more delays: Life on Earth is in peril”

Statement from the World Council of Churches

To the High-Level Ministerial Segment of the

“Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute. Speak up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy” Proverbs 31:8‑9

Fifteen years have passed since we attended the First Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC which met in Berlin in 1995.

Once again we are meeting, completing the first decade of the Third Millennium, in which we had put all our hopes and efforts to solve the severe and urgent problems that are challenging us as inhabitants of the blue planet, our common home.

Time has run past. The problems and their challenges are still here. Scientific knowledge, supported by statistics and climatic models, as well as plain observations made by peasant, farmers, Indigenous peoples and coastal inhabitants has confirmed that the climate is changing because of human activities and that such change will prove disastrous for life in this planet, while we are still unable to take the unavoidable steps to detain the already tangible and oncoming appalling events. Continue reading

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Cancun: Es necesario un cambio en el paradigma económico

Martin Largo, Caritas Espana

Martin Lago

El Cambio Climático supone uno de los mayores retos que va a asumir la humanidad en el siglo XXI, pues tiene impactos en la producción de alimentos y materias primas, salud, migraciones, acceso al agua, nivel del mar, biodiversidad, desastres naturales, y en definitiva la habitabilidad de la tierra.

El cambio climático se produce por la acumulación de gases de efecto invernadero en la atmósfera, que provocan un calentamiento excesivo y un desequilibrio en el funcionamiento de los ecosistemas. Tres cuartas partes de estos gases han sido emitidos por los países desarrollados, que acumulan solamente un 15% de la población mundial. Por ello, los países ricos tienen la obligación moral de hacer los mayores esfuerzos por remediar el problema. Continue reading

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Cancun climate conference: moral dimensions

Faith communities came together to address climate change, poverty and sustainable development in a joint Caritas Internationalis, ACT Alliance and World Council of Churches side event to the Cancun climate summit on 7 December. Credits: Alberto Arciniega/Caritas

Faith communities came together to address climate change, poverty and sustainable development in a side event jointly organised by Caritas Internationalis, ACT Alliance and the World Council of Churches (WCC) at the Cancun climate summit on 7 December.

“We are talking about people, not words. It is about working towards climate justice so the poor don’t pay the price for climate change,” said the moderator Martina Liebsch, Director of Policy at Caritas Internationalis.

The four speakers at the event entitled “Faith based organizations advocate for climate justice” came from Mexico, Nicaragua, Bolivia and Thailand. Continue reading

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