Church leaders from the United Reformed Church, Baptist Union of Great Britain, and the Methodist Church in Great Britain have joined together to provide the following statement on the conclusion of the COP27 Climate Conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, held from 6-20 November:
While we are extremely conscious of the cost-of-living crisis and the economic bearing it is having here in the UK, we cannot ignore the tremendous impact of climate change in other parts of the world and overlook our responsibility towards it.
We continue to look to leaders in the UK and across the world to address the climate emergency with a sense of urgency, fairness and justice.
We are grateful for the vital commitment in Sharm el-Sheikh to establish a “loss and damage” facility. All are impacted by climate change. We have recently seen unprecedented floods in Pakistan and Bangladesh and continued drought in East Africa.
Industrialised countries such as Germany and high-emitting states such as China have seen rivers drying up. But it is low income countries that are frequently the worst affected by climate related disasters. They simply do not have adequate resources to rebuild shattered infrastructure and livelihoods.
COP27 has seen recognition of the need for compensation for loss and damage rise much higher on the global agenda. We commend states and regions, including Scotland, that have committed early funding to support those who have seen their livelihoods or homes destroyed.
As the recent UN Environment Programme report has pointed out, limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees requires global emissions to be cut by 45% by 2030. Policies implemented so far suggest that we could be heading for a catastrophic 2.7 degrees of warming.
God’s creation is precious and is vital for the flourishing of all life. We lament the lack of urgency and will to co-operate to address this crisis. COP27 shows that governments have yet to loosen the chains of past practice and vested interests.
World leaders cannot leave this conference believing that they have done enough and must appreciate that there is still much more to do. We pray for a renewed collaboration between people and governments, and that a deeper recognition of our shared humanity might soon lead to the compassionate and just climate action that our world so urgently needs.
Revd Fiona Bennett, Moderator of General Assembly, United Reformed Church
Anthony Boateng, Vice-President of the Conference of the Methodist Church
Revd Lynn Green, General Secretary, Baptist Union of Great Britain
Dave Gregory, Convenor, Baptist Union Environment Network and Former President, Baptist Union of Great Britain
Revd Graham Thompson, President of the Conference of the Methodist Church
Image: Matthew Tenbruggencate/Unsplash.