A Message from Bishop Frederick Henry
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Cultivate Peace, Protect Creation
“If
you want to cultivate peace, protect creation,” writes Pope Benedict
XVI in his message for the January 1, 2010, World Day of Peace.
Our
duties towards the environment flow from our duties towards the person
and the degradation of the environment jeopardizes the welfare of the
poor and especially of future generations. He writes:
“Prudence
would thus dictate a profound, long-term review of our model of
development, one which would take into consideration the meaning of the
economy and its goals with an eye to correcting its malfunctions and
misapplications. The ecological health of the planet calls for this,
but it is also demanded by the cultural and moral crisis of humanity
whose symptoms have for some time been evident in every part of the
world.”
Pope Benedict cites several problems as
evidence of a growing need to address environmental concerns: pollution
and deforestation, the aggressive exploitation of natural resources
found in impoverished countries, the conflicts that have arisen over
control of those resources, the spread of untrammeled consumerism, the
appearance of “environmental refugees” who leave their homes to escape
a degraded habitat. These problems, he said, are “ultimately also moral
crises, and all of them are interrelated.”
To address
these crises, and to build an economic system that allows for
sustainable and equitable development, we need to adopt “a lifestyle
marked by sobriety and solidarity.” The Pope notes that solidarity
should extend to the poor of our own generation—who are most vulnerable
to the effects of environmental degradation—but also to future
generations, who will be forced to cope with whatever environmental
damage we have done.
In reflecting on recent
negotiations held in Copenhagen, the minimalist stance of our Canadian
government, and on the words of Pope Benedict, it is worth
emphasizing that although climate change affects us all, it affects
some more than others. Poor people held back by sustained and chronic
deprivation of resources, capability and power, which limits their
choices and security, are being affected first and most profoundly.
The
impacts of climate change on global meteorological systems are widely
recognized. These include the increasing occurrence of extreme weather
events, heavy and erratic rainfall, drought, sea level rise, glacial
melting and retreat, sea-ice shrinking, and the contraction of snow
cover and permafrost thawing. When we look at how climate change is
experienced by affected communities it becomes clear that the impacts
are both multifaceted and far-reaching.
1. Natural disasters
Between
1990 and 1998, 94 percent of the world’s 568 major natural disasters
and more than 97 percent of all natural disaster-related deaths were in
the developing countries. People living in poverty are often vulnerable
and marginalized in their societies due to poor-quality housing,
overcrowding, and a lack of alternative livelihoods. As a result, they
are more exposed to the impacts of natural disasters where many lose
their lives, most lose their dwellings and crops, and their water
sources are polluted. Furthermore, increased frequency and intensity of
natural disasters mean that those living in poverty do not have the
time or resources to adequately recover from one disaster before they
are hit by the next.
2. Food scarcity
The
number of under-nourished people world-wide stood at 923 million in
2007. This figure is set to increase as rises in temperatures are
already causing increased drought and flooding. In 2007 and 2008 we
have already witnessed food riots in over 30 countries due to rising
food prices, which have been linked in part to reduced yields due to
the effects of climate change.
3. Water Security
Access
to clean, safe water, already inadequate in many countries, is being
further eroded in many communities as a result of climate change. This
is due to drought and as a result of salt water invading the soil in
low-lying coastal areas, poisoning freshwater wells. In Africa alone,
the population at risk of increased water stress due to climate change
is projected to be between 75 and 250 million people by 2020.
4. Health
Erratic
temperature changes, including extremes of heat and cold cause higher
death rates with fatal diseases, and Greenhouse Gas pollution and smog
have a severe impact on respiratory diseases. Climate sensitive
diseases, for example, those transmitted through water and via vectors
such as mosquitoes, are among the largest global killers; diarrhea,
malaria and protein-energy malnutrition alone caused more than 3.3
million deaths globally in 2002.
We are not powerless,
and our history shows that we can act effectively. In the 1970s the
international community responded with relative success to serious
environmental alarms over acid rain and in the late 1980s to a growing
hole in the ozone layer. Civil society has made major achievements in
eradicating national debts of developing countries, which take away
much of the resources they could use to invest in development. Climate
change presents a greater and more complex problem that fundamentally
questions our aspirations to certain styles of living and ways of
thinking about development.
At a personal level we can
act daily to decrease our ecological footprint, but it is urgent that
we have leadership at the national and international level to foster a
global future of climate justice.
The UN Secretary
General, Ban Ki-moon, said. "So while I am satisfied we have a deal
here in Copenhagen, I am aware that it is just the beginning. It will
take more than this to definitely tackle climate change, but it is a
step in the right direction.” I would suggest that it is a very small
step.
February 06, 2010
✠ F. B. Henry
Bishop of Calgary.
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