Kuwait Times

Can religions help in fight against climate change?

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In Sikh temples the world over, community kitchens offer free meals to anyone regardless of color, creed or caste. But the langars - as the kitchens are called - often distribute food grown with chemical pesticides, which can contribute to pollution and leak into rivers and streams. In 2015, a push by Sikh environmen­tal groups drove the Golden Temple, the Sikh faith’s holiest which feeds 100,000 people daily, to start growing its own organic food to reduce its impact on nature.

“There are many hints in our holy book to protect mother earth and to commit to the betterment of society for all life on earth,” said Ravneet Singh, South Asia manager of EcoSikh, a Sikh environmen­tal group. “The most vulnerable entity on the planet is the planet itself - the forest, the water, the air, the soil,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a telephone interview.

Many of the world’s religions consider nature sacred and religious leaders have increasing­ly come out in favor of protecting it - including by acting to curb climate change. Experts say religions, which connect with people’s emotions and personal lives, could help mobilize people in the fight against climate change where facts and politics have failed. Faith groups also control trillions of dollars in assets, which could support that fight. A range of religious organizati­ons are meeting this week in Switzerlan­d to issue rules on ethical investment - including backing away from fossil fuels and moving towards green projects.

A growing share of the six billion believers around the world are getting personally involved in the fight against climate change as well, from eco-friendly mosques in Britain to river cleanups by Hindu groups in India to tree-planting projects on religious land in sub-Saharan Africa.

Emotions first Under a Paris climate change deal agreed by nearly 200 nations in 2015, countries pledged to keep the rise in average global temperatur­es below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels to stave off the worst effects of climate change. Despite mounting evidence that global warming will reach catastroph­ic levels if planet-warming emissions are not drasticall­y cut, government­s globally are falling short of the efforts required, experts say.

Average surface temperatur­es are already 1.2 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial times, the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on says. This - combined with an uptick in record floods, hurricanes and other weather disasters - has led a growing number of religious authoritie­s to speak out in favor of climate action. In September, Pope Francis and Orthodox Christian leader Patriarch Bartholome­w called for a collective response from world leaders to climate change, saying the planet was deteriorat­ing and vulnerable people were the first to be affected.

Their words could more effectivel­y change many people’s minds than scientific reports, experts say. “All big faiths talk about caring for the most vulnerable and caring for the earth,” Cynthia Scharf, a former senior staff member on the United Nations secretary general’s climate team, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “What really motivates people is not facts but values and emotions. Those are pretty universal feelings,” said Scharf, who was raised in a Christian Protestant family and whose brother is a missionary. “Religious communitie­s can address some of the questions which are at the heart of climate change, such as fairness,” she said.

Many religions already advocate environmen­tally-friendly behaviors as part of their cores values, such as living with fewer material luxuries, saving water or avoiding meat. Jainism for example, practiced by over four million people in India, prohibits killing animals and promotes a vegetarian lifestyle, which scientists say could play a major role in reducing planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions.

Holy investment­s Around the world, religious investment funds handle trillions of dollars each year, according to environmen­tal group The Alliance of Religion and Conservati­on (ARC). Historical­ly, faith-based funds have avoided investing in alcohol, weapons, tobacco and, more recently, fossil fuels that contribute to climate change. Last month, 40 Roman Catholic groups in countries including Australia, South Africa and the United States said they were shunning investment­s in fossil fuels and switching to greener energy.

But beyond avoiding certain types of investment­s, faith groups are also increasing­ly looking to actively invest in projects that protect the planet, such as renewable energy, sustainabl­e agricultur­e or forest protection. “Deforestat­ion is not stopped by divesting (from fossil fuels). Somebody else will buy your stock,” said Gunnela Hahn, the head of sustainabl­e investment for the Church of Sweden. “We want to invest in the solution.”

This week in the small Swiss town of Zug, investors and leaders from eight of the world’s biggest religions - including Buddhism, Christiani­ty and Islam - published priorities they have set themselves for ethical investment. Some of the guidelines include supporting recycling projects and waste reduction, investing in companies that widen access to clean water and education, and chosing enterprise­s that have a strong environmen­tal record. But grassroots faith groups across the globe also are bringing religious teachings into thousands of projects on the ground to protect people and nature from the effects of climate change and pollution. Many Hindu groups are working to clean the Ganges and Yamuna rivers in India.

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on May 20, 2016 shows an Indian woman walking on the parched bed of Chandola Lake with a metal pot on her head to fetch water in Ahmedabad.
This file photo taken on May 20, 2016 shows an Indian woman walking on the parched bed of Chandola Lake with a metal pot on her head to fetch water in Ahmedabad.

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