Australian Bishops support
proposed climate Change Bill
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| An orphaned baby Koala seeks solace on a vet's shoulder at a makeshift field hospital at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park (AFP) |
Australia’s Catholic Bishops support a proposed Climate
Change Bill that aims to provide a national framework for action in response to
climate change emergencies.
By Linda Bordoni
The Catholic Bishops of Australia say they will support a
proposed Bill on a National Framework for Adaptation and Action on climate
change.
A statement by Catholic Earthcare Australia, an ecological
agency established by the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference on Tuesday
indicated that the bishops give their support “in principle” to the Private
members Bill that is to be submitted to parliament to galvanise action around
Climate Change.
Months of devastating bushfires in Australia have taken 28
lives so far, destroyed over 2,500 homes and razed forests and farmland the
size of Bulgaria. Over a billion animals are estimated to have been killed and
some of the nation’s unique flora and ecosystems have been burnt to cinders.
Catholic Earthcare director, Bernard Holland, noted that the
successful passage of similar Bills in other nations has provided indications
for “the way forward in difficult times”.
The Bill, which is currently being drafted by the Office of
Parliamentary Counsel, will set out a framework for national plans to be put in
place and updated by the Australian government, and for progress to be
monitored and reported.
Bishop Vincent Long of the Australian Bishops’ Commission
for Justice Ecology and Development described the proposed framework as very
timely.
Call for solidarity and prayers
Earlier this month, the bishops’ conference released a
statement in which they asked for solidarity and prayers for those affected by
the fires. They also pointed out that while “the bishops typically respond to
challenges at a parish or diocesan level, the scale of this crisis requires a
national response from the whole Church to complement and coordinate what is
happening locally”.
They put their support behind a donation campaign launched
by the St. Vincent de Paul Society and said they would collaborate with
national health and social services agencies “to ensure an effective a response
as possible from the wider Catholic community.
“With broad and deep roots across the nation, the Church
stands ready to walk alongside people throughout their journey of recovery”,
the bishops said, renewing their call “for insistent prayer for those stricken
by drought and fire, for those who have lost their lives in the fires and their
families, for rain to quench the parched land and extinguish the fires, and for
urgent action to care for our common home in order to prevent such calamities
in the future.”

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