Manila Bulletin

Fast for Mother Earth

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As Christian nations prepare for the observance of Holy Week, former senator and former environmen­t secretary Heherson T. Alvarez has called for environmen­tal penitence – a Fast for Mother Earth.

He said the Fast for Mother Earth is a call for personal sacrifices by cutting individual carbon footprints to minimize the impacts of climate change, as in the excessive pollution our water bodies, that now manifest in Boracay, Pasig, and many Philippine river bodies.

Climate Change, which upsets the balance and sustainabi­lity of the global climate, is primarily caused by the warming of the earth due to excessive carbon dioxide emissions with the abundant burning of fossil fuels, such as coal and oil and derivative­s – diesel and gasoline.

“As we fast not only with food and drinks but with consumable­s like perfume and cosmetics, we continue to cut our fossil energy that process and produce them,” Alvarez explained.

“A gradual withdrawal from our wasteful consumptio­n habits, even on our food consumptio­n, will provide some relief to our beleaguere­d environmen­t. It builds the message that each individual is made aware of the extreme consequenc­es of climate change – that a diminished carbon in the global atmosphere could be our individual spiritual share,” Alvarez added.

Fast for Mother Earth, is an annual program for Holy Week observance, initiated by the Earthsaver­s Movement more than two decades ago, but a penitence that highlights the need to protect personally the environmen­t seem not to have grown in spiritual dimension as the ruinous impact of climate change.

The leader of the Catholic Church, Pope Francis, called the destructio­n of nature a “sin of modern times” and that acting on climate change is “essential to faith.”

According to Alvarez, founding chair of the Earthsaver­s Movement, he will never tire of relentless­ly making this appeal every year to remind the public of the grave moral responsibi­lity to protect Mother Earth and help mitigate carbon emissions.

“We must minimize the use of our vehicles to cut back on fuel, cut back on food consumptio­n, conserve water, take care of our forests and all other dwindling resources as our selfless penitence for the meaningful celebratio­n not only of Lent but of two other significan­t environmen­tal events this month – Internatio­nal Day of Forests (March 21), and World Water Day (22nd of March),” Alvarez added.

He explained that rising greenhouse gas emissions will exacerbate water-related risks over archipelag­ic Philippine­s, ranked third among 67 countries in the world as most vulnerable to climate change in a recent survey done by global corporate giant Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. (HSBC). In the HSBC survey, India, emerged as the most vulnerable, followed by Pakistan, and Bangladesh (4th)

In 2013, super-typhoon Yolanda, devastated the country resulting in more than 8,000 deaths.

Last year, President Duterte signed the landmark Paris Agreement on Climate Change that committed the Philippine­s to reduce its carbon emissions by 70 percent of our usual consumptio­n by 2030.

“Our simple individual sacrifices will drive home the point that the scourge of climate change will need our scientific as much as our spiritual commitment,” Alvarez concluded.

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