Will
Pope Francis's encyclical become his 'miracle' that saved the planet?
The
clearest and loudest moral case yet for action now, firmly rooted in
justice for the world’s poor, could galvanise the world to act on
climate change
Damian Carrington /
Thursday 18 June 2015 15.26 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/damian-carrington-blog/2015/jun/18/will-pope-franciss-encyclical-become-his-miracle-that-saved-the-planet
Pope Francis’s
encyclical, subtitled Care for our Common Home, has created a global
news event. The question now is whether it will become a historic
news event, by galvanising real action to avert catastrophic climate
change.
There’s a chance
it will, for two reasons. First, the moral force the pope brings to
bear may kindle that most fragile necessity: political will. Second,
his declaration of the atmosphere as a common good, owned by all for
all, may help settle the enduring argument about which nations have
the responsibility to act. The rich owe the poor, he says.
Climate change, the
mass extinction of species and the poisoning of the oceans have been
unfolding like slow-motion disasters for decades and universally
damage the lives of the poor for the benefit of the rich. The science
is now beyond any reasonable dispute and the economic benefit of
acting is clear.
Yet for many people
these planetary crises have not felt, deep down, like moral issues.
They are too distant in time and space, affecting people we don’t
know and creatures we have never heard of. As coal, oil and gas
continue to be burned, and emissions rise, the risk of floods,
famines, heatwaves and refugees that will affect us all rises. And
yet so little has been achieved to curb the use of fossil fuels.
The pope provides
the clearest and loudest moral case yet for action now, firmly rooted
in justice for the world’s poor.
“We have to
realise 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,” he writes. “Leaving an inhabitable planet to future
generations is, first and foremost, up to us. The issue is one which
dramatically affects us, for it has to do with the ultimate meaning
of our earthly sojourn.”
This moral
leadership is important, says climate economist Lord Nick Stern,
because of “the failure of many heads of state and government
around the world to show political leadership”. But it also matters
in the very worldly pursuit of getting a strong, workable climate
change agreement at a crunch UN summit in Paris in December.
“You should never
underestimate the soft power of moral arguments,” says Professor
Ottmar Edenhofer, chief economist of the Potsdam Institute for
Climate Impact Research, a Catholic and who met Pope Francis in July
2014 to brief him on climate change. “It does not provide you with
an immediate bargaining chip in the negotiations, but in the end when
global agreements are not perceived as fair and just, they are very
hard to implement.”
Edenhofer points to
a single, short sentence in the encyclical as profound: “The
climate is a common good, belonging to all and meant for all.”
From this simple
statement follows radical consequences, Edenhoder says. It means that
the last carbon emissions we can afford to leak into the atmosphere
before disaster strikes must be distributed equitably among all the
people of the world - and the rich nations have already had their
fair share. As the pope puts it, “a true ecological debt exists,
particularly between the global north and south”.
The woman charged
with delivering the global climate deal, the UN’s Christiana
Figueres is in no doubt of the encyclical’s importance: “It will
have a major impact. It will speak to the moral imperative of
addressing climate change in a timely fashion in order to protect the
most vulnerable.”
That is the positive
case. There are numerous argument as to why the pope’s carefully
timed intervention may in the end prove to be little more than a
passing distraction. Of the biggest polluters – China, US, India,
Russia, Japan – only the US has significant Catholic population and
that is riven by partisan division. On the other hand, some south
American nations have been obstructive in the global climate
negotiations and may be swayed by the pope.
Some may think the
pope’s moral authority is overstated, given the Catholic church’s
differences with much of the modern world on contraception and
homosexuality and the corrosive child abuse cover-ups. Yet Pope
Francis is more often seen in a positive light than a negative one.
Only time will
reveal the true impact of the encyclical on the greatest long-term
challenge facing civilisation. But if the moral argument it presents
moves the problem from one that “should” be tackled sometime to
one that “must” be tackled now, it will have performed a
remarkable act.
Perhaps one might
even call it a miracle.
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