Pope Francis’ Powerful Call for Climate Action

By Ciara Shannon

After watching Pope Francis’s funeral, as I’m quite new to the area, I decided to go for a wonder. I soon found myself looking at the towering fells and lush green valley surrounding St. Mary’s Church in Longsleddale.

Feeling a bit awestruck, I thought about the Pope’s remarkable legacy and some of his words came to mind:
“The world is a delicate gift that we have received. Our common home is like a sister with whom we share our life and a beautiful mother who opens her arms to embrace us.”

Then another of his reflections popped into my head:
“The earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth.”

There’s nothing quite like a blast of truth to remind us of how badly we are managing the environment.

Stewards of the Earth (and all its mess)

“We are all stewards of the Earth, and we have a responsibility to safeguard and protect it for future generations.”

Pope Francis possessed a remarkable ability to combine compassion, honesty, and that rare quality—humour. He was also an exceptional leader in environmental issues. He consistently urged us to transform our relationship with the Earth and with one another—essentially asking us to stop acting like unruly tenants and start behaving as responsible stewards.

In his groundbreaking ecological encyclical Laudato Si’ (2015), published just ahead of the Paris Agreement, he addressed people of all faiths — and none — reminding everyone that the Earth is “our common home”.

Three simple words that evoke a familiar relationship with the natural world. Three simple words that make the Earth our own and future generations. He stressed that the Earth is not an object for exploitation, but a sacred gift meant to sustain all life. Crucially, he acknowledged the scientific consensus on climate change and how humans are causing climate change.

Another key theme in Laudato Si’ is the link between consumerism, overconsumption, and environmental degradation. He critiqued the “throwaway culture” that produces waste, inequality, and resource exploitation, and urged a shift towards a simpler lifestyle that prioritises the needs of both the planet and the poor.

He also introduced the insightful concept of integral ecology, which connects care for the environment, human dignity, and social justice. He argued that solutions must consider the entire interconnected web of life. An idea that closely aligns with Buddhist ecological thinking, where interdependence and compassion for all living beings are fundamental principles.

Reading beyond the theology, a punchy moral dilemma emerges: do we want to continue creating a mess, or do we wish to turn things around while we still have the chance?

Thank you, Pope Francis, for providing the world with the climate leadership we desperately needed—leadership based on the belief that another path is possible.

At the end of June 2015, in celebration of the encyclical, I was involved in OurVoices which collaborated on climate change with faiths in the run-up to the Paris Agreement.

On the hottest day imaginable, we covered St Peter’s Square in green leaves and soaring paper kites, calling for climate action. Pope Francis looked on and even called out our name in thanks.

OurVoices worked closely with the Church of England, the Vatican, on other religious and spiritual communities to give a powerful voice to the moral imperative of climate change.  Our Voices work reached government leaders and citizens across the world. We did this with GreenFaith and with the Global Catholic Climate Movement – now the Laudato Si Movement.

There is a tangible link to green finance in all of this in that OurVoices was set up, via many conversations with Christiana Figueres (UNFCCC Executive Secretary at the time), by the late, great Tessa Tennant – the godmother of sustainable finance.

Many thanks to Skelsmergh, Selside and Longsleddale for posting this article in their June newsletter.

The Bulbous £28 Billion Distraction

Originally written as a guest blog for Britain’s Energy Coast Business Cluster (BECBC).

In February, it was hard to ignore the flurry of commentary about Labour’s U-turn on their £28 billion Green Investment Pledge, first announced in 2021. 

£28 billion a year in green capital investment, every year, until 2030 was going to turbocharge the green industrial revolution to be spent on battery manufacturing, green hydrogen, offshore wind, tree planting, flood defences and home insulation etc.

Without a doubt, green investment and investing in local net zero economies is desperately needed. But Labour’s £28 billion Green Pledge was becoming a thorny, bulbous distraction.

A bit like Boris’ £350 million a week NHS Bus Pledge – central to the election campaign in 2019 – but always destined to fail.

What’s been less newsworthy but announced by climate scientists on the very same day, is that the world has breached for a whole year, the warming limit of 1.5 degrees centigrade above pre-industrial levels. An announcement that comes hot on the heels of UK investments in new oil and gas fields in the North Sea and the construction of homes and offices that are neither energy-efficient nor climate-resilient.

While a public spending commitment is of course important, the very real and urgent focus should be on the best route to leverage private and public investments in green energy. For example, we need greater clarity on how public funds can leverage private sector investment, how public spending can support early-stage net zero businesses and risk financing, as well as for other stages, like the Valley of Death.

We also need a clearer plan as to how green infrastructure can be built faster, planning accelerated, and decisions made quicker.

There is also more that local authorities can do with local investors. Just this week, Hammersmith & Fulham Council’s Community Municipal Investment (CMI) offer hit its £1 million target with a record number of investors. The CMI is delivering real change in communities, through local authority led net zero projects. Are we thinking about this in Cumberland?

As we said in our Green Investment Plan for Cumbria report, Cumberland as a centre of clean energy innovation, is well placed to lead the competitive race to build knowledge networks and supply chains for the net zero goods and services of the 21st century.

But it needs to look beyond its nuclear offering and cheer on, just as loudly, its renewable energy potential and how its own supply chain companies can diversify their portfolio to support more local green businesses. Think green hydrogen projects at Carlisle, Workington, and Whitehaven or green steel opportunities in Workington (or its surrounds) etc.

Along West Cumbria’s coastline there are eight offshore wind installations bringing major business, investment, and job opportunities along with it. Offshore wind has been making an impact in Cumbria since 2006. Official data for offshore wind generation is defined by where the supply ‘lands’ – Robin Rigg (East and West) – is located midway between the Galloway and Cumbrian coasts in the Solway Firth in Scottish waters, but ‘lands’ in Seaton near Workington in Cumbria. This contrasts with Walney 1, 2, 3, Ormonde, Barrow, and West of Duddon Sands wind farms, which, though an important part of Cumbria’s renewable supply, reach land in Lancashire.

But If I was to walk around Workington or Whitehaven – how many people could tell me about how the offshore wind sector contributes to the local economy or its significant operational and maintenance (O & M) contribution? Possibly they might know about the Robin Rigg Community Fund, funded by RWE, that gives grants to community groups and organisations on both sides of the Solway area.

We should be making much more of Cumberland’s natural born windy coast, it’s bounty of nature-based solutions – positioning Cumberland as a leader in net zero, contributing to global innovation and sustainable growth and being competitive in the future. But to get there, we need strong public policies to drive innovation and help crowd in private investment to tackle climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental degradation.