South Wales Echo

Ex-Archbishop calls for climate action

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A FORMER Archbishop of Canterbury has urged the UK Government to insulate more homes and take “a more edgy role internatio­nally” to tackle the climate crisis.

Dr Rowan Williams made the remarks ahead of attending a “world-first” inter-faith Climate Repentance Ceremony in London yesterday.

The former Archbishop of Wales and former Bishop of Monmouth said he was “disappoint­ed” with the Prime Minister’s, later reversed, decision not to attend the Cop27 climate summit in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt.

He also expressed “a lot of sympathy” with the argument that “shock tactics” used by climate protest groups such as Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion can “break through to people”.

Asked if the UK Government is doing enough to get a grip of the climate emergency, he said: “Big question that, I think the answer is probably no.

“I would like to see them doing more, I would like to see them pushing ahead a bit further with insulation schemes for example and also playing, I think, a slightly more edgy role internatio­nally.”

Senior faith leaders from countries including Egypt, USA, Israel, India, Spain and the UK gathered at the base of Parliament Hill in Hampstead, northwest London, for the event, organised by the Elijah Interfaith Institute, yesterday. Similar ceremonies were set to happen in Sharm El-Sheikh and other locations around the world.

Organisers say it was the first multi-faith ceremony to “seek forgivenes­s for climate sins” and hope it will “inspire humility and action” during Cop27, which ends on Friday.

The faith leaders climbed the hill together, clutching scrolls bearing the “Ten Principles for Climate Repentance” before proclaimin­g them.

This was a nod to the 10 commandmen­ts which in the Bible God reveals to Moses on Mount Sinai, a mountain on the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt about 200km away from the Cop27 conference.

The leaders then took part in a multi-faith Climate Repentance Ceremony at a synagogue in north London.

Swansea-born Dr Williams – chancellor of the University of South Wales – urged people to join them, on behalf of humanity, in repenting for “an attitude of greed, irresponsi­bility and chronic short-term vision to the world we share”.

On calls for developed nations to make “loss and damage” payments to developing countries hit by the climate crisis, he said: “On reparation­s, my sympathies are with those who are calling for that because we’re looking largely at countries whose economy and environmen­t have been really determined for two or three hundred years by the agenda of wealthier western nations.”

Asked if disruptive protests by groups such as Just Stop Oil are justifiabl­e, he said: “Mixed feelings to be honest, tactically speaking I do take the point some people are really, seriously alienated by actions like this especially if they’ve been sitting on the M25 for five hours or whatever it might be.

“But at the same time I’ve got a lot of sympathy with the idea that some kinds of shock tactics do break through to people and my own question is always: how far can you go with shock tactics before you really lose the audience?

“I think I’d echo what I think (the columnist) Polly Toynbee said in The Guardian the other day, if you’re really angry and put off by the actions of Just Stop Oil protesters, what exactly are you doing, what are you going to do to turn all this around?”

The UK Government has been approached for comment.

 ?? ?? Dr Rowan Williams
Dr Rowan Williams

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