British Climate Czar Alok Sharma. By Chris McAndrew, CC BY 3.0, Link

UK Energy Secretary Appeals for Faith Leaders to Save COP26

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

COP26 President Alok Sharma has thanked 40 faith leaders for presenting a commitment to promote a voluntary permanent climate lockdown, in the form of “Encouraging our communities to embrace simple and sustainable lifestyles at home, so as to reduce our collective carbon footprint”. But Alok has explained, more needs to be done to help spread the message.

The original appeal from the 40 faith leaders;

4 October 2021 – Joint Appeal

One family in a common home

Today we come together united, in human fraternity, to raise awareness of the unprecedented challenges that threaten us and life on our beautiful common home, the Earth.

As leaders and scholars from various religious traditions, we unite in a spirit of humility, responsibility, mutual respect and open dialogue. This dialogue is not limited to merely the exchange of ideas, but is focused on the desire to walk in companionship, recognizing our call to live in harmony with one another and with nature.

Today’s gathering is the fruit of months of involved fraternal dialogue among faith leaders and scientists coming together, aware of the necessity of an even deeper solidarity in the face of the global pandemic and of growing concern for our common home.

Our awareness: nature is a gift

Nature is a gift, but also a life-giving force without which we cannot exist. Our faiths and spiritualties teach a duty, individual and collective, to care for the human family and for the environment in which it lives. We are not limitless masters of our planet and its resources. We are caretakers of the natural environment with the vocation to care for it for future generations and the moral obligation to cooperate in the healing of the planet.

We are deeply interdependent with each other and with the natural world. This connection is the basis for interpersonal and intergenerational solidarity and for overcoming selfishness. Damage to the environment is a result, in part, of the predatory tendency to see the natural world as something to be exploited with disregard for the extent to which survival hinges on biodiversity and on maintaining the health of planetary and local ecosystems. Multiple crises facing humanity are demonstrating the failures of such an approach; these are ultimately linked to a crisis of values, ethical and spiritual.

Faith and science are essential pillars of human civilization, with shared principles and complementarities. Together, we must address the threats facing our common home. The warnings from the scientific community are becoming increasingly stark and clear, as is the need for concrete steps to be taken. Scientists say that time is running out. Global temperatures have already risen to the point where the planet is warmer than at anytime in the last 200,000 years. We are on course for a rise in temperature of more than two degrees above the pre-industrial levels. It is not just a physical problem but also a moral challenge. The climate crisis affects us all, but it does not involve us all equally, because it will have different yet devastating effects on people in industrialized and non-industrialized countries. In particular, it affects the poorest, especially women and children in the most vulnerable countries, which are the least responsible for it.

Humanity has the power to think and the freedom to choose. We must address these challenges using the knowledge of science and the wisdom of religion: to know more and to care more. We should seek solutions within ourselves, within our communities, and with nature, adopting an integral approach. We must think long-term for the sake of the whole of humanity, now and in the future.

We need to expel the seeds of conflicts: greed, indifference, ignorance, fear, injustice, insecurity and violence. We must focus particularly on those at the margins. We need to act together to inspire and energize each other. We need to live in peace with one another and with nature. Now it is the time to take transformative action as a common response. As the COVID pandemic rages, 2021 presents a vital challenge to turn this crisis into an opportunity to rethink the world we want for ourselves and for our children.

Care must be at the heart of this conversion, at all levels.

Our call: the need for greater ambition at COP26

We need a framework of hope and courage.

But we also need to change the narrative of development and to adopt a new kind of economics: one that places human dignity at its center and that is inclusive; one that is ecologically friendly, caring for the environment, and not exploiting it; one based not on endless growth and proliferating desires, but on supporting life; one that promotes the virtue of sufficiency and condemns the wickedness of excess; one that is not only technologically driven, but is moral and ethical.

Now is the time for urgent, radical and responsible action. Transforming the present situation requires the international community to act with greater ambition and fairness, in all aspects of its policies and strategies.

Climate change is a grave threat. In the interest of justice and fairness, we advocate for common but differentiated climate action at all levels, from individual behavioral changes to high-level political decision-making processes.

The world is called to achieve net zero carbon emissions as soon as possible, with wealthier countries taking the lead in reducing their own emissions and in financing emission reductions from poorer nations. It is important that all governments adopt a trajectory that will limit the global average temperature rise to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. To achieve these goals of the Paris Agreement, the COP26 Summit should deliver ambitious short-term actions from all nations with differentiated responsibilities. There is also an urgent need to deliver action to meet its medium- and long-term commitments.

We beg those nations with the greatest responsibility and present capacity to: step up their climate action at home; fulfil existing promises to provide substantial financial support to vulnerable countries; agree on new targets to enable them to become climate resilient, as well as to adapt to and to address climate change and loss and damage, which is already a reality for many countries.

We will accompany nations in seeking to protect and invest in the marginalized groups and vulnerable populations within their own borders, who for too long have borne disproportionate burdens and been on the frontlines of poverty, pollution and pandemic. The rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities must be given special attention, protecting them from predatory economic interests. They have been caretakers of the earth for millennia. We should listen to them and be willing to be guided by their wisdom.

We appeal to governments to raise their ambitions and their international cooperation to: favor a transition to clean energy; adopt sustainable land use practices including preventing deforestation, restoring forests and conserving biodiversity; transform food systems to become environmentally-friendly and respectful of local cultures; end hunger; and to promote sustainable lifestyles and patterns of consumption and production.

We ask that full consideration be given to the effects on the workforce of the transition to a clean energy economy. Priority must be given to the creation of decent employment for all, particularly those in fossil fuel dependent sectors. We ask to ensure an effective and inclusive just transition to low greenhouse gas emissions and climate resilient development. At the same time, we call on them to consider both short-term and long-term social and economic consequences, and adopt a balanced approach that combines care for future generations with guarantee that no one is deprived of his/her daily bread in our own time.

We call upon financial institutions, banks and investors to adopt responsible financing for investments that have positive impacts on people and the planet.

We call upon civil society organizations and everyone to face these challenges with courage in a spirit of collaboration.

In parallel, we ask the leaders attending COP26 to ensure that no more biodiversity is lost, and that all land and water ecosystems are restored, protected and sustainably managed.

In order to achieve these goals, a major educational challenge stands before us. Governments cannot handle such ambitious change alone. We need all of society – the family, religious institutions, schools and universities, our businesses and financial systems – to engage in a transparent and collaborative process, ensuring that all voices are valued and all people represented in decision-making, including those most impacted, especially women, and those communities whose voices are often ignored or devalued.

This is where we, religious leaders and institutions, can make an important contribution. Humanity must rethink its perspectives and values, rejecting consumerism and the pervasive throwaway culture, and embrace a culture of care and cooperation.

Raising public awareness is indispensable to the change of course that is needed.

Our commitment and our creativeness

The followers of religious traditions have a crucial part to play in addressing the crisis of our common home. We commit to taking much more serious action. Young people are demanding that we listen to the scientific insights and that we, their elders, do much more.

First, we commit to advancing the educational and cultural transformation that is crucial to sustain all other actions. We underline the importance of:

* Deepening our efforts to bring about a change of heart among the members of our traditions in the way we relate to the earth and to other people (‘ecological conversion’). We will remind our communities that care for the earth and for others is a key tenet of all our traditions. Recognizing the signs of the divine harmony present in the natural world, we will strive to incorporate this ecological sensitivity more consciously into our practices.

* Encouraging our educational and cultural institutions to give priority in their programs to relevant scientific insights, to strengthen integral ecological education, and to help students and their families relate to nature and to others with new eyes. Beyond the transmission of information and technical knowledge, we want to instill deep-rooted virtues to sustain the ecological transformation that is required.

* Participating actively and appropriately in the public and political discourse on environmental issues, sharing our religious, moral and spiritual perspectives and uplifting the voices of the weakest, of young people, and of those too often ignored, such as Indigenous Peoples. We underline the importance to reframe environmental debates from being about technical issues alone to include moral issues.

* Engaging our congregations and institutions with their neighbours in the building of sustainable, resilient and just communities, creating and developing resources for local cooperation in, for example, restorative small-scale agriculture and renewable energy cooperatives.

Second, we underline the importance of taking far-reaching environmental action within our own institutions and communities, informed by science and based on religious wisdom. While calling on governments and international organizations to be ambitious, we also recognize the major role we play. We wish to emphasize the importance of:

* Supporting actions to reduce carbon emissions, achieve carbon neutrality, promote disaster risk reduction, improve waste management, conserve water and energy, develop renewable energy, provide green open spaces, conserve coastal areas, prevent deforestation and restore forests. Many of these actions require partnership with farming and fishery communities, especially small-scale and family farmers, whom we will support.

* Working to make bold plans to achieve full sustainability in our buildings, land, vehicles and other properties, joining the global race to save our planet.

* Encouraging our communities to embrace simple and sustainable lifestyles at home, so as to reduce our collective carbon footprint.

* Striving to align our financial investments with environmentally and socially responsible standards, ensuring greater accountability and transparency as the tendency to move away from investments in fossil fuels and toward investments in renewable energy and restorative agriculture is becoming ever more widespread. We will encourage public and private sector stakeholders to do the same.

* Evaluating all the goods we purchase and the services we hire with the same ethical lens, avoiding two different moral standards being applied to the business sector and to the rest of social life. For instance, we will raise awareness in our faith communities about the need to examine our banking, insurance and investment choices, to correct them in line with both the values we proclaim here.

Our hope: a time of grace, an opportunity that we cannot waste

We are currently at a moment of opportunity and truth. We pray that our human family may unite to save our common home before it is too late. Future generations will never forgive us if we squander this precious opportunity. We have inherited a garden: we must not leave a desert to our children.

Scientists have warned us that there might be only one decade left to restore the planet.

We plead with the international community, gathered at COP26, to take speedy, responsible and shared action to safeguard, restore and heal our wounded humanity and the home entrusted to our stewardship.

We appeal to everyone on this planet to join us on this common journey, knowing well that what we can achieve depends not only on opportunities and resources, but also on hope, courage, solidarity and good will.

In an age fraught with division and despair, we look with hope and unity to the future. We seek to serve the people of the world, particularly the poor and the future generations, by encouraging a prophetic vision, a creative, respectful and courageous action for the sake of the Earth, our common home.

Source: UK Government

COP26 President Alok Sharma’s response;

Playing our part to turn the tide on climate change

COP26 President-Designate Alok Sharma’s remarks at the Vatican following the powerful call to action from faith leaders ahead of the climate change summit in Glasgow.

From: Cabinet Office and The Rt Hon Alok Sharma MP
Published 4 October 2021

Your Holiness, Esteemed Faith Leaders, Scientists and Minister.

It is an honour to receive this Appeal.

And I look forward to hearing today from so many inspiring faith leaders from across the world.

Daniele [Guadagnolo] and Federica [Gasbarro] have spoken with great passion, and their energy and sense of urgency echoes so clearly the sentiment I heard throughout the Youth4Climate event in Milan last week.

The climate crisis we face is grave. And entirely of our own making.

A crisis built by human hands.

And it is easy to feel overwhelmed by the sheer scale of the challenge.

By the injustice of the situation, where the poorest are suffering the most, having contributed the least to climate change.

But today shows us how we can, and will, turn the tide.

Doing so requires us all to play our part.

Every country and every part of society, mounting a global effort led by those most human qualities, reason and morality. The head and the heart.

Through science we understand the damage we are inflicting on our planet, and its people.

Through morality we comprehend our responsibility to restore the planet and nature.

The Hindu tradition, into which I was born, teaches that nature is divine, and that we must promote the welfare of all living beings.

Religions around the world contain similar teachings.

So we need our youth to continue to call for change, with the passion we have heard today.

We need scientists, with their academic authority, to amplify further their voices in the public debate, and faith leaders to use their moral leadership to make the case for action.

This Appeal does just that, with immense clarity and power.

Forty faith leaders have come together, and working with scientists, have created a powerful call to action for the world.

I thank you for the months of hard work that have gone into this Appeal.

For the commitments you have made to take action.

And for the strength of your message to governments at COP26.

Our priorities are shared.

I too am committed to keeping the 1.5 degree limit alive, to following the science, driving action in vital areas like power and deforestation, and to delivering for developing nations, including vitally on finance, as justice requires.

This Appeal is a powerful call in support of these efforts.

And I commit to working with you all to spread its message to Ministers, world leaders, and all at COP26, in Glasgow where the world will decide the future of our planet and its people.

And I request you to do the same.

Please spread the message of this Appeal far and wide.

As individuals and collectively, you have a very powerful set of voices.

I am very well aware of the scale and the gravity of the task ahead in Glasgow.

But the strength of purpose I have witnessed here today gives me great hope for our collective future.

So I thank all of you for your work, His Holiness and his team for hosting this gathering, and the Hon. Luigi Di Maio and Italy, our partners for COP – and partners in this initiative, thank you.

Source: https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/playing-our-part-to-turn-the-tide-on-climate-change

In my opinion the people behind this dialog won’t be happy until they have rolled back civilisation to the medieval age, when church and state utterly dominated the lives of peasants, and individual liberty for commoners was not even a concept.

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Doug S
October 5, 2021 9:03 am

This pretty much settles the issue of Climate alarmism. It’s a religious movement by the climate disciples’ own description.

John the Econ
October 5, 2021 9:05 am

The climate crisis we face is grave. And entirely of our own making. A crisis built by human hands.

Ironically true. This goes in my “Global Warming is a Religion” file.

John Larson
Reply to  John the Econ
October 6, 2021 5:40 pm

Well, I tend to agree there’s a form of “religion” behind what is happening, but obviously it has a great many scientists in the pews, so to speak. Not just the “climate scientists” producing the “doctrine” of Global Warming, but also in the Science “establishment” in general.

It’s the “religion” of materialism, one might say. Within this religion, there is Grand Origin Story (GOS Evolution), which renders us just another animal, just another “successful” variation of a happenstance (A-theistic) materialistic process. And, those who ascribe to this religion’s Grand Origin Story have no (logical) reason to behave as another animal might: In their self interest.

An Anglerfish does nothing “wrong” (on GOS Evolution) when it tricks another fish into coming close enough to become it’s happy meal ; ) It does something right. The new “King” of a lion pride does nothing “wrong” (on GOS Evolution) when it kills the cubs of the King it just deposed . . it does something right.

And the Climate Scientists (el al), do nothing “wrong” (on GOS Evolution) when they stack the deck, so to speak. Nor do any other scientists when they stack their decks . . if it helps them get their happy meals ; )

I don’t understand why so many who ascribe to GOS Evolution themselves, complain about those who live out what this “religion” professes. This is what they wanted. This is what they thought would “free” humanity from the silly chains that the Founders of Science (in the modern sense of the word), which is to say Christian intellectuals, were foolishly binding themselves with. And what they wanted all the children to be indoctrinated to have “faith” in, this Grand Origin Story they have such faith in.

(Rejoice, O wise ones, you won the “survival of the fittest” competition, and those foolish GOS Evolution deniers can’t even publish in “reputable” Science Journals now . . anymore than those foolish “climate deniers”, who get no happy meals, they are so foolish . . Enjoy what you made, I suggest. Enjoy the fruits of your religion’s great triumph ; )

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 9:09 am

What no pagan rep invited? And no atheist contingent? What’s the one started to protest at state Capitols for equal displays?

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 9:25 am

Order your wind and solar powered light up baby Jesus today for only $29.99 for the cause. We’ll throw in a bag of wood pellets to keep someone warm this winter for a few minutes at least.

Jeff Labute
October 5, 2021 9:28 am

Governments appeal to faith leaders? I can’t imagine what this would look like. Re-open residential schools for climate indoctrination and drag the children away? Gotta’ watch out for those people calling for unity and lying about the earth being warmer than the last 200,000 years.

Crowcatcher
October 5, 2021 9:50 am

I remember a few years ago the Archbishop of Canterbury spouting a load of rubbish about “global warming”, so I wrote to him pointing out that turning off the floodlights on all his churches would be a great in help to combat the “problem” – surprise, surprise I didn’t receive a reply!

Fran
October 5, 2021 9:51 am

Verbal diarrhea in spades.

Reply to  Fran
October 5, 2021 10:03 am

You mean logorrhoe ?

n.n
October 5, 2021 9:51 am

Twilight faith. He’s playing with a double-edged scalpel.

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 10:03 am

Have faith in the holy models and straightedge predictions and be tempted not unto evil cyclical thoughts and fact checking. (I mean real fact checking and real science, not FB fact checking and Penn State investigations)

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 10:07 am

New bumper sticker: Question Climate Authority!

October 5, 2021 10:09 am

Quote:“Encouraging our communities to embrace simple and sustainable lifestyles at home, so as to reduce our collective carbon footprint”. But Alok has explained, more needs to be done to help spread the message

Yes yes yes. Epic. Thank you. At long last.

Why do I say that….
Question: “How dumb is it possible to be?
Answer….
Alok Sharma is The (latest) Turkey who has just voted for Christmas.
If everyone is staying at home being ‘simple‘ then they are not going out spending money and in the UK, a very simple BoE will tell anyone that 65%+ of everyone’s gross salary is taken off them in Tax and other mandatory takes.

Done on in order to fund muppets like you Mr Sharma and vaaaaaast numbers more in The Public Sector and all their Crony Friends.

Since the time of Tony Blair and when he tripled the size of the UK Statute Book (obviously the lovely Cherie cooking up business for all her Lawyerlie friends) you have done nothing but project your own selfishness, greed, social dysfunction, paranoia, scientific/technical/financial incompetence onto the UK people.

What you suggest will consign you and vast numbers of your civil servants to the Trash Can of UK history..

Hello hello hello, THAT is exactly why the Brexit Vote went the way it did.
We wanted rid of you clowns and all your creepy clown friends in Brussels.

I have posted into ‘comments’ somewhere (possibly the BBC actually) that the Brexit Vote was just the very first step and who would have thunk, the people to suggest the Next Step are the very ones that the vote went against

Back to where I came in, just how stupid can the players in this thing get……

edit to PS
Search inside that recent leak of financial stuff and Tony/Cherie’s tax dodging in the purchase of expensive London properties.
Didn’t you think it was only shady Russians and oil rich Arabs (entertaining high class Call Girls and casinos) who did that?

No. Wrong.
Our very own ex Prime Minister
<expletive> wow

Mike Lowe
Reply to  Peta of Newark
October 5, 2021 12:19 pm

And our current prime Minister in New Zealand was one of his disciples! Good training for dodgy practices!

October 5, 2021 10:18 am

” … thanked 40 faith leaders for presenting a commitment to promote a voluntary permanent climate lockdown … ”

They love lockdowns!

And the more permanent, the best!

Jailer mentalities!… Theese people abominate freedom!

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 10:34 am

Pray to the God of Winds and the Holy Carbon Tax Market.

October 5, 2021 10:37 am

Scary stuff.

October 5, 2021 11:04 am

They reference 40 “faith leaders,” whatever that is supposed to mean, but they never show the list. Anyone find a link to the list? I suspect that they will be the usual suspects, religions, denominations. Members of the World Council of Churches, etc.

Most “religions” including many branches and denominations calling themselves Christian have been run amok for decades.

This mess of a statement is meaningless, signed by members of dead denominations, sects, etc. It is meant to have an air of clerical authority to try and sway lay people, but it was probably written by secular climate activists in coordination with the known “church” ecoloons.

Any faithful Christian is inherently skeptical and suspicious of any such assertions as written here. Much of it is in direct conflict with scripture.

COP26 organizers are really getting desperate.

John Larson
Reply to  Pflashgordon
October 5, 2021 4:25 pm

Any faithful Christian is inherently skeptical and suspicious of any such assertions as written here. Much of it is in direct conflict with scripture.

I sure am, Eric might as well have said President Alok Sharma has thanked 40 con artists for presenting a commitment to promote a voluntary permanent climate lockdown…

Big Al says;

But today shows us how we can, and will, turn the tide.
Doing so requires us all to play our part.
Every country and every part of society, mounting a global effort led by those most human qualities, reason and morality. The head and the heart. … The Hindu tradition, into which I was born, teaches that nature is divine, and that we must promote the welfare of all living beings.Religions around the world contain similar teachings.’

No doubt some Religions do, but my religion teaches nothing of the sort.

“And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord; and took of every clean beast, and of every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings on the altar.
And the Lord smelled a sweet savour; and the Lord said in his heart, I will not again curse the ground any more for man’s sake; for the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth; neither will I again smite any more every thing living, as I have done.
 While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.”

No mention of catastrophic “global warming”, just weather . . But there is apparently mention of this nature worship stuff;

“For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse:
Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened.
Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools,
And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things.”

October 5, 2021 11:13 am

Hey, I can understand where Alok Sharma is coming from.

Every night I pray to God that someone . . . anyone . . . will set forth an objective, quantifiable definition of what the phrase “climate change” actually means.

Mike Lowe
Reply to  Gordon A, Dressler
October 5, 2021 12:21 pm

Good on ya! I don’t!

Reply to  Gordon A, Dressler
October 5, 2021 2:08 pm
Reply to  Krishna Gans
October 5, 2021 2:45 pm

Post the actual URL, and I might then look.

Ed Zuiderwijk
October 5, 2021 11:21 am

Thank God for atheists. They are exempt, obviously.

4E Douglas
October 5, 2021 12:10 pm

Serf’s up!

Thomas Gasloli
October 5, 2021 12:16 pm

Or, as Greta would say, “Blah, blah, blah.”

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Thomas Gasloli
October 5, 2021 5:01 pm

I think Greta is on the right track.

The whole Human-caused Climate Change scam is all “blah, blah, blah”, Greta.

john
October 5, 2021 12:23 pm

I cannot find out who the 40 faith leaders are

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 12:33 pm

Holding COP26 in the midst of an energy transition crisis is even better than the Olympics in a pandemic. At least the energy crisis is a political and economic learning lesson, at least for some in the UK.

Rory Forbes
October 5, 2021 12:34 pm

What a load of bollox.

ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 2:14 pm

Blessed are the EU coal exporters for they shall warm the homes….

Coal Makes Comeback In Europe As Gas Prices Explode (yahoo.com)

Tom Abbott
Reply to  ResourceGuy
October 5, 2021 5:02 pm

The Greens must be going nuts!

Dave Fair
Reply to  Tom Abbott
October 5, 2021 9:13 pm

Going?