Pope Francis urges world leaders to act on extreme weather
The pope says leaders need to heed the Earths cries of anguish stemming from climate change. Pope Francis has called on world leaders to heed the Earths chorus of cries of anguish stemming from climate change, extreme weather and loss of biodiversity. In a message on Thursday for the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, he urged nations to confront climate change with the same attention as global challenges like wars and health crises, saying global warming hurts the poor and Indigenous populations most. Francis said rich countries have an ecological debt because it is they who had caused the most environmental pollution over the past two centuries, marring natures song. Tragically, that sweet song is accompanied by a cry of anguish. Or even better: a chorus of cries of anguish. In the first place, it is our sister, Mother Earth, who cries out. Prey to our consumerist excesses, she weeps and implores us to put an end to our abuses and to her destruction, he wrote. Emergency services have battled wildfires across swathes of southern Europe amid brutal heatwaves this week, prompting warnings that the fight against climate change needs to be stepped up. The appeal came a few days before the pope is due to leave for a trip to Canada, where he will meet with Indigenous people in Iqaluit, in the Canadian Arctic, which is part of the fastest-warming part of North America. Exposed to the climate crisis, the poor feel even more gravely the impact of the drought, flooding, hurricanes and heat waves that are becoming ever more intense and frequent, Francis said. Likewise, our brothers and sisters of the Native peoples are crying out. As a result of predatory economic interests, their ancestral lands are being invaded and devastated on all sides, provoking a cry that rises up to heaven. Francis repeated an appeal in the name of God that he first made last year to the mining, oil, forestry, real estate and agribusiness industries to stop destroying forests, wetlands, and mountains, to stop polluting rivers and seas, to stop poisoning food and people. The pope, who in 2015 wrote a major encyclical on environmental protection, said the UNs COP15 summit on biodiversity, to be held in Canada in December, presents a big opportunity for an agreement to halt the destruction of ecosystems and the extinction of species. He said COP15 could construct a clear ethical basis for the changes needed to save biodiversity, support conservation and give priority to vulnerable populations, including Indigenous peoples. He called for the effective implementation of the 2016 Paris climate change agreement, whose goal is to limit the increase in average global temperature to 1.5 degrees C (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit). Meanwhile, a top Vatican cardinal endorsed calls for a fossil fuels nonproliferation treaty and said all new exploration and production of oil must be phased out to prevent global temperatures from rising to a precipice. The planet already is 1.2 degrees hotter, yet new fossil fuel projects every day accelerate our race towards the precipice. Enough is enough, Cardinal Michael Czerny, a Canadian Jesuit who runs the Vaticans ecology and development office, said. All new exploration and production of coal, oil, and gas must immediately end, and existing production of fossil fuels must be urgently phased out, Czerny added.