Declaration of Religious Leaders, Political Leaders, Business Leaders, Scientists and Development Practitioners

2015
Workshop
28 April

Declaration of Religious Leaders, Political Leaders, Business Leaders, Scientists and Development Practitioners

Declaration of Religious Leaders, Political Leaders, Business Leaders, Scientists and Development Practitioners

We the undersigned have assembled at the Pontifical Academies of Sciences and Social Sciences to address the challenges of human-induced climate change, extreme poverty, and social marginalization, including human trafficking, in the context of sustainable development. We join together from many faiths and walks of life, reflecting humanity’s shared yearning for peace, happiness, prosperity, justice, and environmental sustainability. We have considered the overwhelming scientific evidence regarding human-induced climate change, the loss of biodiversity, and the vulnerabilities of the poor to economic, social, and environmental shocks.

In the face of the emergencies of human-induced climate change, social exclusion, and extreme poverty, we join together to declare that:

Human-induced climate change is a scientific reality, and its decisive mitigation is a moral and religious imperative for humanity;

In this core moral space, the world’s religions play a very vital role. These traditions all affirm the inherent dignity of every individual linked to the common good of all humanity. They affirm the beauty, wonder, and inherent goodness of the natural world, and appreciate that it is a precious gift entrusted to our common care, making it our moral duty to respect rather than ravage the garden that is our home;

The poor and excluded face dire threats from climate disruptions, including the increased frequency of droughts, extreme storms, heat waves, and rising sea levels;

The world has within its technological grasp, financial means, and know-how the means to mitigate climate change while also ending extreme poverty, through the application of sustainable development solutions including the adoption of low-carbon energy systems supported by information and communications technologies;

The financing of sustainable development, including climate mitigation, should be bolstered through new incentives for the transition towards low-carbon energy, and through the relentless

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We the undersigned have assembled at the Pontifical Academies of Sciences and Social Sciences to address the challenges of human-induced climate change, extreme poverty, and social marginalization, including human trafficking, in the context of sustainable development. We join together from many faiths and walks of life, reflecting humanity’s shared yearning for peace, happiness, prosperity, justice, and environmental sustainability. We have considered the overwhelming scientific evidence regarding human-induced climate change, the loss of biodiversity, and the vulnerabilities of the poor to economic, social, and environmental shocks.

In the face of the emergencies of human-induced climate change, social exclusion, and extreme poverty, we join together to declare that:

Human-induced climate change is a scientific reality, and its decisive mitigation is a moral and religious imperative for humanity;

In this core moral space, the world’s religions play a very vital role. These traditions all affirm the inherent dignity of every individual linked to the common good of all humanity. They affirm the beauty, wonder, and inherent goodness of the natural world, and appreciate that it is a precious gift entrusted to our common care, making it our moral duty to respect rather than ravage the garden that is our home;

The poor and excluded face dire threats from climate disruptions, including the increased frequency of droughts, extreme storms, heat waves, and rising sea levels;

The world has within its technological grasp, financial means, and know-how the means to mitigate climate change while also ending extreme poverty, through the application of sustainable development solutions including the adoption of low-carbon energy systems supported by information and communications technologies;

The financing of sustainable development, including climate mitigation, should be bolstered through new incentives for the transition towards low-carbon energy, and through the relentless pursuit of peace, which also will enable the shift of public financing from military spending to urgent investments for sustainable development;

The world should take note that the climate summit in Paris later this year (COP21) may be the last effective opportunity to negotiate arrangements that keep human-induced warming below 2-degrees C, and aim to stay well below 2-degree C for safety, yet the current trajectory may well reach a devastating 4-degrees C or higher;

Political leaders of all UN member states have a special responsibility to agree at COP21 to a bold climate agreement that confines global warming to a limit safe for humanity, while protecting the poor and the vulnerable from ongoing climate change that gravely endangers their lives. The high- income countries should help to finance the costs of climate-change mitigation in low-income countries as the high-income countries have promised to do; Climate-change mitigation will require a rapid world transformation to a world powered by renewable and other low-carbon energy and the sustainable management of ecosystems. These transformations should be carried out in the context of globally agreed Sustainable Development Goals, consistent with ending extreme poverty; ensuring universal access for healthcare, quality education, safe water, and sustainable energy; and cooperating to end human trafficking and all forms of modern slavery;

All sectors and stakeholders must do their part, a pledge that we fully commit to in our individual capacities. 

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Signed by

Swami Advaita, Founder-Director, Advaitam
Dr. Anthony Annett KCHS, Climate Change and Sustainable Development Director, Earth Institute and Religions for Peace
Margaret S. Archer, PASS President and Professor of Sociology, University of Warwick Pablo Bergel MP, President of the Climate Change Commission, Government of the City of Buenos Aires, Argentina
Jacqueline Corbelli, Chairman and CEO of Brightline
Paul J. Crutzen, PAS Academician and Professor at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Department of Atmospheric Chemistry
Michael Czerny S.J., Office of the President, Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace
Sir Partha Dasgupta FBA FRS, PASS Academician and Frank Ramsey Professor Emeritus of Economics, Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge
Ellen Dorsey, Executive Director, Wallace Global Fund
H.E. Metropolitan Emmanuel, Director, Patriarchate Liaison Office of the European Union Rafael Flor, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, General Secretary, World Council of Churches
Jennifer Stengarrd Gross, William and Sue Gross Family Foundation
Benjamin Harnwell, Founder and President of the Board of Trustees, Dignitatis Humanae Institute
Pavel Kabat, Director General and CEO, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Csaba Kőrösi, Director for Environmental Sustainability, Office of the President of the Republic of Hungary
Fr Luciano Larivera S.J.
Christina Lee Brown, Co-Founder, Center for Interfaith Relations
Dr Yuan T. Lee, PAS Academician and President, International Council for Science
Pierre Léna, PAS Academician and President of La main à la pate Foundation
H.E. Renato Raffaele Cardinal Martino, Honorary President, Dignitatis Humanae Institute Dr. Rajaa Naji al Makkawi, Scholar, Mohammad al Khamis University, Morocco
Valerie Nash, Chief of Staff, Office of the Secretary General, Religions for Peace
Dr Maria Neira, Director, Public Health and the Environment Department, World Health Organization
Rev. Kosho Niwano, President Designate, Rissho Kosei-kai
H.E. John Cardinal Onaiyekan, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, Nigeria
Giannozzo Pucci, Publisher, Libreria Editrice Fiorentina
Idanna Pucci, International Trustee, Religions for Peace

Dr Veerabhadran Ramanathan, PAS Academician and Distinguished Professor of Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD
Sabina Ratti, Executive Director, Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei 
Lord Martin Rees of Ludlow, PAS Academician, Master of Trinity College and Professor of Cosmology and Astrophysics, University of Cambridge
Angelo Riccaboni, Rector, University of Siena
Gualtiero Ricciardi, Commissioner, Italian National Institute of Health, and Director of Department of Public Health, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Johan Rockstrom, Executive Director, Stockholm Resilience Center
Chief Rabbi David Rosen, International Director of Interreligious Affairs, American Jewish Committee
Alejandro Rossi, Environmental Advisor, Latin America and the Caribbean, United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)
Joanna Rubinstein, President and CEO, World Childhood Foundation
Jeffrey Sachs, Director, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Sonia Ehrlich Sachs, Director of Health, Millennium Villages Project, Earth Institute
Msgr. Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, Chancellor of the PAS and PASS
Dr. John Schellnhuber, Director, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Guido Schmidt-Traub, Executive Director, UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network Dr. Michael Shank, Professor, George Mason University
Bhai Sahib Mohinder Singh, Chairman, Guru Nanak Nishkam Sewak Jatha
Jennifer Stengarrd Gross, Member of the Board, SDSN
Dr. Din Syamsuddin, President, Muhammadiyah
His Holiness Sri Sugunendra Theertha Swamiji, Abbot, Sri Puthige Matha
H.E. Peter Cardinal Turkson, President, Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace
Dr. William F. Vendley, Secretary General, Religions for Peace International
Hans Vestberg, CEO, Ericsson
Emmaus Maria Voce, President, Focolare Movement
H.H. Preah Aggamahasangharajadhipati Tep Vong, Great Supreme Patriarch, Kingdom of Cambodia
Terence Ward, International Trustee, Religions for Peace
Elaine Weidman, Vice President, Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility, Ericsson Stefano Zamagni, PASS Academician and Professor, University of Bologna, Department of Economic Sciences