Ecological debt was the issue under discussion at the World Council of Churches Central Committee meetings in Geneva at the end of August.
Delegates heard some of the ways that the global South has frequently been victimised by greed and unfair use of its resources. Dr Maria Sumire Conde from the Quechua community of Peru said that in her native country mining has had particularly devastating effects: relocation, polluted water, illness and decreasing biodiversity.
The concept of ecological debt has been shaped to measure the real cost that policies of expansion and globalisation have had on developing nations, a debt that some say industrialised nations should repay. Dr Joan Martínez Alier, a professor at the Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona in Spain, said that debt includes both actual financial costs as well as intangibles such as quality of life.
Martínez said climate change, unequal trade, “bio-piracy”, exports of toxic wastes and other factors have added to the imbalance, which he called “a kind of war against people around the world, a kind of aggression”.
“I know these are strong words, but this is true,” he said. Martínez beseeched those present, at the very least, to not increase the existing ecological debt any further.
Dr Ofelia Ortega of Cuba, the WCC president from Latin America, said it is a spiritual issue, not just a moral one. “The Bible is an ecological treatise from beginning to end,” Ortega said. She described care for creation as an “axis” that runs through the Word of God. “Our pastoral work in our churches must be radically ecological,” she said.
Dr Kim Yong-Bock of the Advanced Institute for Integral Study of Life in South Korea also framed the issue in biblical language. “God has made comprehensive covenants with all living beings and with the earth as the living entity,” he said. “This covenant is broken.”
The Central Committee underlines the fact that care for creation cannot be separated from profound deliberation and rapid action in looking for a solution to global poverty. Climate change is an issue of justice. At the same time, it is a profoundly ethical and spiritual issue.