"As an international humanitarian organization, we are confronted with the realities of climate change every day and see the devastating impact on the lives of the people we serve," said Bill O'Keefe, vice president for advocacy and government relations for CRS. "People around the world-especially those who contribute least to global warming, will be worse off because of today's decision."
"We must hear the cry of the poor. Withdrawing from Paris and cutting foreign assistance is a double whammy to millions around the world. Without American leadership-imperfect as it is-problems fester, people suffer, and in the end we too feel the effects of instability, forced migration, and conflict," O'Keefe said.
The announcement by President Trump to pull the United States out of the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement is a decision with "catastrophic consequences for the earth and all of its living creatures," according to a statement released today by the Franciscan Action Network.
FAN's Executive Director, Patrick Carolan said, "Issues like poverty and migration are connected to the climate crisis. When there is no water, crops fail and people fall into poverty. Widespread poverty and resource scarcity lead to mass migration. When large countries like the U.S. deny the reality of the climate crisis and pull out of commitments holding us accountable for doing our part to curb global temperature rise, we are turning our backs on the poor and vulnerable, which goes directly against our Franciscan-Christian values."
University of Notre Dame department of Theology
J. Matthew Ashley, associate professor of theology and chair of Notre Dame's Department of Theology, emailed a statement in anticipation of today's decision yesterday: "Responding aggressively and proactively to climate change is a core principle of Pope Francis's encyclical, "Laudato Si,'" not only because of its devastating impact on natural ecosystems, but also because it causes disproportionate suffering for the poor, who do not have the financial resources to avoid or mitigate its effects.
This decision would be, thus, not only an abdication of leadership on an issue on which the U.S. has long led the way, but a direct confrontation with Catholic doctrine, as laid out in this encyclical."
Global Catholic Climate Movement
Tomás Insua, Executive Director of the Global Catholic Climate Movement, issued the following statement: "Trump's withdrawal from the Paris Agreement is a backward and immoral action. Catholics are saddened and outraged that Trump is not listening to Pope Francis after their meeting last week. Still, the world will continue to accelerate climate action, despite the White House's retrograde stance.
As people of faith, we will continue to take action within our Church, and urge elected leaders in the United States and around the world to make the changes needed to hold global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius. Trump's decision only strengthens our resolve to mobilize the global family of 1.2 billion Catholics to reduce emissions, pressure society to change, and spread the Pope's message of Laudato Si in order to protect our common home.
We remain inspired by our faith, Pope Francis, and Laudato Si in our work, keeping in mind this quote from the encyclical, 'While the existing world order proves powerless to assume its responsibilities, local individuals and groups can make a real difference,' (Laudato Si 179)."
Catholic Climate Covenant
Leaders from eleven of Catholic organizations have signed a
letter that expresses "deep disappointment" over President Trump's decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement and cease American contributions to the U.N. Green Climate Fund that will help poorer nations address climate change. The letter, organized by Catholic Climate Covenant, follows a
statement today from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops urging President Trump to "honor the Paris Agreement" and the bishops'
repeatedsupport for the Green Climate Fund.
The letter begins with a description of how climate change harms the human family, especially the poor and marginalized. The letter then underscores that since Saint John Paul II's 1990 World Day of Peace Message, the Catholic Church has recognized climate change as a moral issue that indicts key commitments of Catholic Social Teaching. Additionally, the letter notes that Pope Francis, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, 15,000 U.S. Catholics, majorities of Americans in every state, and hundreds of U.S. businesses - including major fossil fuel companies - support an international climate change agreement. The letter then implores President Trump to reconsider his decisions to withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement and stop American contributions to the Green Climate Fund.
Signatories to the letter include representatives from Catholic Climate Covenant, Catholic Charities USA, the Catholic Health Association and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, among other Catholic organizations.