Pope Francis: Pandemic Has Had ‘Sadly Positive’ Effect on Climate Change

Pope Francis holds a mass to mark 500 years of Christianity in the Philippines, on March 1
TIZIANA FABI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

ROME — Pope Francis underscored the importance of biodiversity and the interaction between the coronavirus and climate change in his Earth Day message Thursday.

“Both global catastrophes, COVID and climate change, show that there is no time to lose,” the pope said in a video message to mark Earth Day 2021. “Time is pressing and, as COVID-19 taught us, yes, we have the means to rise up to the challenge.”

“We have the means. It is time to act, we are at the limit,” he said.

“For some time now we have been becoming more aware that nature deserves to be protected, if only because human interactions with God-given biodiversity must take place with the utmost care and respect: caring for biodiversity, caring for nature,” Francis said in his Spanish-language address.

“And we have learnt this more clearly in this pandemic,” he added. “The pandemic has also shown us what happens when the world stops, pauses, even for a few months, and the powerful impact that this has on nature and climate change, in a sadly positive way, has it not? In other words, it hurts.”

“And this shows us that nature, globally, needs our lives on this planet,” he said. “It involves us all, albeit in many different and unequivocal forms; and so it teaches us even more about what we need to do to create a fair, equitable, environmentally safe planet.”

“I would like to repeat an old Spanish saying: ‘God always forgives, we humans forgive from time to time, nature no longer forgives,’” the pontiff said. “And when this destruction of nature is triggered, it is very difficult to stop it.”

“But we are still in time,” he continued. “And we will be more resilient if we work together instead of doing it alone.”

“The adversity that we are experiencing with the pandemic, and that we already feel in climate change, must spur us on, must drive us to innovation, to invention, to seek new paths,” he said.

If we do not come out of this crisis better, “we will be on a path of self-destruction,” he declared.

The pope concluded his message by launching an appeal to all the leaders of the world “to act with courage, to act with justice and to always tell people the truth, so that people know how to protect themselves from the destruction of the planet, how to protect the planet from the destruction that we very often trigger.”

COMMENTS

Please let us know if you're having issues with commenting.