Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and now President of the Mary Robinson Climate Justice Foundation, has called on faith leaders to speak out on climate justice.
In her opening address at the conference on climate justice organized by Trócaire, the University of Maynooth and St Patrick’s College, she said: “It would be good to have faith leaders of different denominations and religions speak out on climate justice … We need more dialogue, more conversation … it is moral voices that are going to be needed a lot.”
Addressing the delegates at the conference, which was titled ‘Meeting the Challenge of Climate Justice: From Evidence to Action’, Ms Robinson said that two-thirds of known fossil-fuel reserves must be left in the ground if global warming was to be kept at less than 2 degrees above pre-industrial levels. “The latest science makes it clear that the world needs to reach zero carbon emissions globally by 2050 to maximise chances of staying below 2 degrees and to make 1.5 degrees feasible,” she said. “To do this, two-thirds of the known fossil-fuel reserves must be left in the ground and alternative sources of clean energy found.”
Ms Robinson, who is also the UN envoy on climate change, noted that a recent UN review showed 2 degrees was a defence line rather than a safe limit. The review pointed “towards a 1.5-degree limit to avoid the worst impacts of climate change”.
“Science tells us we are far off track to meet even the goal to keep global temperature rise below 2 degrees Celsius. We are on track to a 4 degree warmer world compared to pre-industrial levels,” she said.
Developing countries would have to grow “using a different model to that which made the industrial countries wealthy” that can be achieved only if they “are supported with the necessary climate finance, investment and transfer of technology to make this transition,” she said.
Climate justice linked human rights and development “to achieve a human-centred approach, safeguarding the rights of the most vulnerable and sharing the burdens and benefits of climate change equitably and fairly,” she said. It provided “the moral imperative to act”.
The climate challenge demanded “global co-operation on an unprecedented scale – a whole new era of solidarity based on an understanding of our interconnectedness,” she said, adding that it “confronts us with the reality of our interdependence”.
Ms Robinson recalled how in his encyclical Laudato Si’ Pope Francis said : “We have to realise that a true ecological approach always becomes a social approach; it must integrate questions of justice in debates on the environment, so as to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor.” She said it was a call for climate justice “from one of the most influential moral voices on our planet today”.
She said the Pope had established “climate change and safeguarding the Earth for humanity as a fundamental moral issue of our time”.
See the Trócaire website to find out more about what was said at the conference.