A Word About the Weather

As I write, I’m also packing my toothbrush and notebooks for a conference on Catholic social teaching and climate change, beginning tomorrow at Catholic University in Washington. The climate part needs little explanation, especially after the latest climatic disaster known as Hurricane Sandy. The part about Catholicism or religious faith in general is another matter.

Even TheoPol is not quite prepared to say that theological and moral perspectives are especially critical to discussions of climate change. One would think facts and science—the inconvenient truths, as far as we know them—should be uppermost in the public debate. But theology has a way of crashing parties, including the political ones.

For now, I’ll say there’s an important link between theological ethics and at least one aspect of global climate change: relationships between rich and poor nations. In their 2001 pastoral letter, Global Climate Change: A Plea for Dialogue, Prudence, and the Common Good, the U.S. bishops zeroed in on four points about equity in these relationships.

1) Rich and poor nations alike have a responsibility to address the climate threat;

2) Historically the advanced economies have generated the highest levels of greenhouse gas emissions known to cause climate disruptions;

3) In addition, wealthy nations have a greater capacity to lessen the threat of climate change, while many impoverished nations “live in degrading and desperate situations” that lead them to adopt ecologically harmful practices;

4) Advanced economies should bear the heaviest responsibilities for solutions to climate change. “Developing countries have a right to economic development that can help lift people out of dire poverty,” the bishops noted. “Wealthier industrialized nations have the resources, know-how, and entrepreneurship to produce more efficient cars and cleaner industries,” and they should “share these emerging technologies with the less-developed countries….”

These too are inconvenient truths. Undergirding them are moral and theological principles, among them solidarity and the biblical “preferential option for the poor.” Of course, all this is tendentious drivel if you think global warming is a hoax. Which brings us back to science—until further word.

 

 

 

Comments

  1. Joe Murphey says

    Global warming may be a difficult notion to convince some of. What is undeniable is that ice is essentially being converted to water or vapor. Ice caps and glaciers are receding, sea level is rising.
    There is a second notion (Second Law) in thermodynamics, that of entropy. If ice is being converted to liquid or vapor, entropy is rising. An easier way to understand this for the layman might to explain that entropy is a measure of the disorder in a closed system. That is the randomness of the world is physically increasing due to such melting. It may be impossible to relate a specific storm of even series of storms to global warming, but they are certainly indicative of greater disorder in the total system.

  2. Vincent G Sbano says

    Americans have truly embraced the preference for the poor. They generally prefer to have the effects of pollution and climate change visit the poor.

    • William Bole says

      I think the weather, which everyone likes to talk about, is a tough sell when it comes to doing something about it–as far as climate change goes.

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