Chattanooga Times Free Press

Faith groups learn about ‘moral obligation’ to fight climate change

- BY WYATT MASSEY STAFF WRITER

The religious community has played important roles in the past century in social movements from poverty to civil rights. And, members of several religions heard Monday night, the next major fight for the faithful should be stopping climate change.

The Rev. Susan Hendershot, Interfaith Power & Light president, and Ken Kimmell, Union of Concerned Scientists president, led a discussion about the size of the problem, steps to reverse the disturbing trends and the moral obligation the faith community has to protecting the planet.

Working on environmen­tal issues can be a tangible representa­tion of faith since faith requires followers to care for the planet and work in the present to create a better future, Hendershot said.

“Science tells us what is happening and how we can solve it,” she said. “The faith community can provide the why.”

The nearly 100 people gathered at the Unitarian Universali­st

Church of Chattanoog­a on Monday night included Unitarians, Quakers, Episcopali­ans and Jews.

Interfaith Power & Light, a San Francisco-based organizati­on, has 40 state affiliate programs, including one in Tennessee, which gives the organizati­on a reach to about 20,000 congregati­ons to advocate for greater participat­ion by faith communitie­s in fighting climate change individual­ly and collective­ly, Hendershot said.

Kimmell, whose nonprofit organizati­on uses science to advocate for policy positions related to climate change, transporta­tion and economic equity, said the collaborat­ion with Interfaith Power & Light is part of a move to build a broader coalition of people addressing climate change. Hendershot and Kimmell are making five stops throughout the Southeast United States, including in Atlanta; Birmingham, Alabama; Greenville, South Carolina; and Raleigh, North Carolina.

“Our view of the political landscape of climate change is that we’ve really got to broaden the coalition to make lasting change,” Kimmell said.

The work of the coalition would be to create policy changes on the local, state and federal levels, Kimmell said. The presidenti­al administra­tion under Donald Trump has removed a number of Environmen­tal Protection Agency regulation­s implemente­d under former President Barack Obama. In June 2017, Trump removed the United States from the Paris Agreement, an internatio­nal agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The world will experience food shortages and major species extinction­s by 2040 unless trends of climate change are reversed, according to a 2018 report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change. Increasing global temperatur­es will lead to greater risks of heat-related illness, greater air pollution, damaged food supplies and more severe weather, according to the Tennessee Department of Health.

People should be alarmed by the present and future threats of climate change, Kimmell said, but they should not be immobilize­d. The necessary changes to reach “net zero” emissions — having all carbon emissions offset by carbon removal practices — are already in process. Those changes include expanding electric car use and curbing damaging industrial practices, removing carbon from the atmosphere and incentiviz­ing companies to decarboniz­e, he said.

Kate Anthony, 72, said faith communitie­s must take up the issue of climate change because many traditions require followers to be stewards of the earth. Scientists and faith leaders can create an important partnershi­p, she said.

“Some people think science and faith [are] opposed and they’re not,” she said. “And this is one way to demonstrat­e this.”

The other issues faith communitie­s take on — from food insecurity to poverty — will be made worse if the climate continues to warm, said Olin Ivey, Urban Century Institute board member and longtime advocate for sustainabi­lity.

“If we do not make radical changes, and very, very soon, not only here in the United States but the overall world, I do not see the world being habitable past 2040,” Ivey said.

Hendershot said she was encouraged by the growing Tennessee chapter of Interfaith Power & Light and the energy in local faith communitie­s. She and Kimmell may make a second tour to visit more congregati­ons throughout the United States, Hendershot said.

Contact Wyatt Massey at wmassey@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6249. Find him on Twitter at @News4Mass.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY WYATT MASSEY ?? Ken Kimmell, Union of Concerned Scientists president, outlines the trends of climate change for local faith communitie­s Monday night at the Unitarian Universali­st Church of Chattanoog­a.
STAFF PHOTO BY WYATT MASSEY Ken Kimmell, Union of Concerned Scientists president, outlines the trends of climate change for local faith communitie­s Monday night at the Unitarian Universali­st Church of Chattanoog­a.

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