Parolin at Cop24: Working
together to build our common home
Holy See's Delegation at Cop24 in Katowice, Poland. |
Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin,
addressed the High-Level Segment of Cop24 in Katowice, Poland, on Monday,
urging the achievement of the Paris Agreement goals and collaboration in
building our common home.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
The Holy See’s voice was heard on Monday at the Cop24 taking
place in Katowice, Poland from 2-14 December. Vatican
Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, addressed the
High-Level Segment, greeting those present on behalf of Pope Francis. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report released in
October of this year, he says, indicates that a “collective response” is needed
in order to “work together to build our common home”.
Climate change requires political will
Cardinal Parolin cited the IPCC Special Report saying there
is still time to recuperate the goals of the Paris Agreement and “limit global
warming”. This requires a “strong political will” in embracing a model for
development, technology and behavior that reduces the emission of greenhouse
gasses. The Paris Agreement Work Programme, he said, responds to the question
regarding whether there is “sufficient political will to implement” such new
models. Cardinal Parolin said that three things are important for the Holy See regarding
this Work Programme. The first is that it be built on “a clear ethical
foundation”. Secondly, that it be directed toward “advancing the dignity of the
human person, alleviating poverty and promoting integral human development”.
Lastly, that it focus on meeting both present and future needs.
Climate change connected with job opportunities
A further consideration Cardinal Parolin proposed to
implement the Paris Agreement is the availability of “more appropriate job
opportunities”. The “creation of decent work is significant”, he said, and is
connected with human rights, security, and the elimination of poverty
especially for people more likely to be affected by “climate extremes”.
Climate change is a moral issue
It is becoming clearer that climate change is more a moral
issue rather than a technical one, Cardinal Parolin continued. Thus Pope
Francis’ indicated in Laudato Si’, no. 139 that “strategies for a
solution demand an integrated approach to combating poverty, restoring dignity
to the excluded, and at the same time protecting nature”. This requires a
mentality centred on values that highlight “the ethical and human dimension of
climate change”.
Climate change requires collective response
Another aspect of the issue is a responsibility to future
generations, who should not have to “absorb the problems caused by the previous
ones”, the Cardinal said. He repeated Pope Francis’ hope that humanity of the
twenty-first century be “remembered for having generously shouldered” its
responsibility vis-à-vis the post-industrial period which “may well be
remembered as one of the most irresponsible in history (Laudato Si’ no.
165)”. For this to become a reality, “we have no alternative but to make every
effort to implement a responsible, unprecedented collective response, intended
to ‘work together to build our common home’ (Laudato Si’, no 13)”.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét