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Home News

Vatican official calls for shared responsibility in protecting planet

byCNS
25 September 2014 - Updated on 1 April 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Cardinal Pietro Parolin

Cardinal Pietro Parolin: "There is no room for the globalisation of indifference, the economy of exclusion or the throwaway culture so often denounced by Pope Francis." Photo: CNS/Jorge Silva, Reuters

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Cardinal Pietro Parolin
Cardinal Pietro Parolin: “There is no room for the globalisation of indifference, the economy of exclusion or the throwaway culture so often denounced by Pope Francis.”
Photo: CNS/Jorge Silva, Reuters

A SENSE of “shared responsibility to protect our planet and the human family” must influence how nations react to the reality of climate change, the Vatican’s secretary of state told the United Nations on September 23.

In a statement during the UN Climate Summit, Cardinal Pietro Parolin observed that “warming of the climate system is unequivocal. It is a very serious problem which … has grave consequences for the most vulnerable sectors of society and, clearly, for future generations”.

He noted that from the beginning of his pontificate, Pope Francis had emphasised the importance of protecting the environment, “which all too often, instead of using for the good, we exploit greedily, to one another’s detriment”, Cardinal Parolin said, quoting the Pope’s March 2013 address to the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See.

Prudence must prevail in the face of the risks and costs of the increase of greenhouse gases caused by human activity, Cardinal Parolin said. This required political and economic commitments by the nations of the world, including the Holy See, he said.

He again quoted Pope Francis, from a general audience in May, when he said a risk lies in the “considering ourselves the masters of creation. Creation is not some possession that we can laud over for our own pleasure, nor, even less, is it the property of only some people, the few. Creation is a gift, it is the marvelous gift that God has given us so that we will take care of it and harness it for the benefit of all, always with great respect and gratitude.”

Cardinal Parolin said that over the decades since the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, there had been increasing awareness that the entire international community was interdependent. “There is no room for the globalisation of indifference, the economy of exclusion or the throwaway culture so often denounced by Pope Francis,” he said.

A collective response, “based on a culture of solidarity, encounter and dialogue”, should be the basis of interactions of every family, including the human family, he said.

“States have a common responsibility to protect the world climate by means of mitigation and adaptation measures, as well as by sharing technologies and ‘know-how’,” the cardinal said.

He warned that market forces alone, “especially when deprived of a suitable ethical direction”, cannot resolve the interdependent crisis of global warming, poverty and exclusion.

Ethical motivations behind complex political decisions, such as those required to address climate change, must be clear, the cardinal said. “Within this perspective, an authentic cultural shift is needed which reinforces our formative and educational efforts, above all in favour of the young, towards assuming a sense of responsibility for creation and integral human development of all people, present and future.”

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He noted that the Vatican City State, “though small, is undertaking significant efforts to reduce its consumption of fossil fuels through diversification and energy efficiency”. He added that the Holy See’s delegation to the UN’s climate change conference in Warsaw, Poland, last November said “talking about emission reductions is useless if we are not ready to change our lifestyle and the current dominant models of consumption and production”.

Cardinal Parolin said the Holy See and other Catholic entities were committed to environmental responsibility, “in the conviction that the deterioration of nature is directly linked to the culture which shapes human co-existence. Respect for environmental ecology is a condition of, and conditioned by, respect for human ecology in society.”

CNS

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