Kuwait Times

Religious, indigenous leaders meet to protect rainforest­s Paris climate deal ‘doomed’ without forest action

-

Religious and indigenous leaders began talks yesterday on ways to protect tropical rainforest­s, with host Norway warning that a global plan to slow climate change will be doomed without action ranging from the Congo basin to the Amazon. Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist and Daoist representa­tives met with indigenous peoples in Oslo to explore moral and ethical arguments to shield forests that are under threat from logging and land clearance for farms.

Organizers said the Oslo Interfaith Rainforest Initiative was the first to gather religious and indigenous peoples to seek out common ground to protect forests. They hope to organize a summit in 2018. “We are losing the tapestry of life and biodiversi­ty that is in rainforest­s,” Norwegian Climate and Environmen­t Minister Vidar Helgesen told a news conference on the June 19-21 meeting. Forests are homes and a source of income to millions of people.

And rainforest­s are also a giant natural store of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas from burning fossil fuels. Trees release the gas when they rot or are burnt to make way for farms, such as for cattle or palm oil plantation­s. “The Paris Agreement is doomed if deforestat­ion continues,” Helgesen said. Many countries have reaffirmed support for the 2015 Paris pact to phase out greenhouse gas emissions after US President Donald Trump announced plans on June 1 to pull out, saying he wants to promote the US fossil fuel industry.

Bishop Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo, head of the Vatican’s Pontifical Academy of Sciences, said trees were vital to the cycle of water and life on Earth. “If we alter this we can arrive to have a planet that has no life,” he told Reuters. “Trees don’t have only ecological value for us, but also cultural value for us. Every tree,” said Joseph Itongwa of Democratic Republic of Congo, a representa­tive of indigenous peoples in Africa.

The net extent of the world’s forests shrank by 33,000 square kilometers a year from 201015, about the size of Belgium, the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on says. The rate is still high though about half that of the 1990s. Mary Evelyn Tucker, director of Yale University’s forum on Religion and Ecology, said religious groups such as the World Council of Churches were seeking ever more to restrict investment­s in areas that damage the environmen­t. Among other measures, for instance, Indonesia’s highest Islamic council last year issued a fatwa on burning land and forests in an effort to protect forests and halt toxic smog. —Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait