Pope Francis Decries Earth’s ‘Unprecedented Ecological Crisis’

Pope Francis attends the meeting "Faith and Science: Towards COP26" on October 4, 2021 in
ALESSANDRO DI MEO/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

ROME — Pope Francis warned Monday that humanity is inflicting “serious wounds” on the environment and threw his moral weight behind the upcoming United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26).

Human beings are inflicting serious wounds on the environment “such as climate change, desertification, pollution and loss of biodiversity,” the pontiff said in a message in preparation for the U.N. conference.

These ecological wounds are the fruit of “seeds of conflict,” Francis said, namely “greed, indifference, ignorance, fear, injustice, insecurity and violence.”

Such conflicts, moreover, are leading to the breaking of the “covenant between human beings and the environment, which should mirror the creative love of God, from whom we come and towards whom we are journeying,” he added.

The only way to counteract climate change and other ecological ills is by “an urgently needed change of direction, nurtured also by our respective religious beliefs and spirituality,” the pope said. “We cannot act alone, for each of us is fundamentally responsible to care for others and for the environment.”

Pope Francis joins his hands as he meets with Benin President Patrice Talon on the occasion of a private audience at the Vatican, Friday, May 18, 2018. (Vincenzo Pinto/Pool Photo via AP)

Vincenzo Pinto/Pool Photo via AP

As he has often done, Francis promised his unconditional support to the U.N. climate change program, underscoring his belief that the world is undergoing an “unprecedented ecological crisis.”

“COP26 in Glasgow represents an urgent summons to provide effective responses to the unprecedented ecological crisis and the crisis of values that we are presently experiencing, and in this way to offer concrete hope to future generations,” he said. “We want to accompany it with our commitment and our spiritual closeness.”

Pope Francis has made ecology and the battle against climate change a pillar of his pontificate and in 2015 became the first pope in history to devote an entire encyclical letter to the topic of the environment.

This year, he reiterated his conviction that the earth is suffering the worst environmental crisis of its history.

Climate change activists, both young and old, take part in the international Strike for Climate protest in Los Angeles, California on May 24, 2019. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP) (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)

Climate change activists, both young and old, take part in the international Strike for Climate protest in Los Angeles, California on May 24, 2019 (FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images).

For a long time, the earth “has suffered from the wounds that we cause due to a predatory attitude, which makes us feel like owners of the planet and its resources and authorizes us to irresponsibly use the goods that God has given us,” he said in a video message last May.

“Today, these wounds are dramatically manifested in an unprecedented ecological crisis that affects the soil, air, water and, in general, the ecosystem in which human beings live,” he added.

In February, Francis said it was his hope “that the next United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26), to take place in Glasgow next November, will lead to effective agreement in addressing the consequences of climate change.”

“Now is the time to act, for we are already feeling the effects of prolonged inaction,” he warned.

The pope asserted that climate change is producing the gradual disappearance of “numerous small islands in the Pacific Ocean” and provoking “the destruction of entire villages” as well as displacement of families and communities “with the loss of their identity and culture.”

Francis also blamed climate change for floods in Vietnam and the Philippines as well as “increased warming of the earth, which has caused devastating fires in Australia and California.”

n this Dec. 6, 2017, file photo, a motorist on Highway 101 watches flames from the Thomas Fire, the largest wildfire on record in California, leap above the roadway north of Ventura, Calif. On Thursday, May 10, 2018, Gov. Jerry Brown signed an executive order that aims to reduce the dangers of wildfires following some of the deadliest and most destructive blazes in state history. The order calls for accelerating forest management procedures such as cutting back dense stands of trees, setting controlled fires to burn out thick brush and reforesting damaged areas.

AP Photo/Noah Berger

The effects of climate change are particularly grave in Africa, the pope declared, leading to food insecurity “with millions of people suffering from hunger.”

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