Yorkshire Post

Climate is everyone’s problem, says former Archbishop

-

THE ENVIRONMEN­T is the “largest challenge” ever faced by humanity, former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams has warned.

Lord Williams of Oystermout­h, 69, said the issue is “everyone’s problem” and legislatio­n alone cannot fix it. In an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, he also criticises echo chambers on both sides of the political debate.

“Arguably the largest challenge ever to the human race is the shape of an environmen­tal challenge,” he told artist Grayson Perry, who guest edits Today on Boxing Day.

Climate change, Lord Williams said, is “not a problem coming from outside. It’s everyone’s problem, everybody’s issue.

“It’s also not something legislatio­n alone can cure.”

Lord Williams spoke out about the “sinister feeling that this must be some kind of conspiracy”. The belief that “climate change has been invented by communists, illuminati or some sort of other mysterious group who are determined to undermine who were are. That’s something I worry about,” he said.

“The idea that there are people who believe climate change is a huge confidence trick.”

The former Archbishop of Canterbury, who held the post from 2002 to 2012, criticised an “echo chamber” in thinking, saying “we speak to people who mirror back what we think”. And he said both the ideologies of the Left and Right will not be able to deal alone with the fact “that we are vulnerable as a human race”.

Lord Williams criticised “myths” on both sides in the runup to the General Election.

He told Today: “Broadly on the Conservati­ve side, there’s an assumption still that most of our ills are caused by something coming in from outside.”

Grayson Perry is one of five people who takes over Today during the Christmas and New Year period, including outgoing Supreme Court president Lady Hale, from Yorkshire, today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom