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Pope Francis

Francis' visit to highlight climate change issue

Traci Watson
Special for USA TODAY
Pope Francis greets mayors from around the world at a conference on climate change and human trafficking held at the Vatican in July 2015.

Pope Francis wants you to turn off the A/C.

That’s one of the implications of Francis’ extraordinary recent statement about the environment, which firmly blames humans for global warming and laments the impact of technology and capitalism on what the pope calls “sister Earth.” Released shortly before the pope’s U.S. visit, the 184-page document is the most sweeping and high-profile religious declaration about climate change and a call for radical reform in all sectors of society.

The pope’s statement, which takes the form of a teaching document called an encyclical, could influence the thinking and habits of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics. But its impact won’t necessarily end there. The encyclical could well affect high-stakes climate talks this December, when 200 countries hope to finalize a treaty to cut pollution linked to climate change. And some experts say Francis’ words could help shift attitudes well beyond his own flock.

The document will draw “wide attention because of the content but also because of who the pope is — a very well-respected moral leader,” says Mary Evelyn Tucker of Yale University’s Forum in Religion and Ecology. The pope’s message, she says, is “calling us to change who we are as humans.”

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Never before has a pope made the environment the subject of an encyclical, an authoritative document meant to inspire university curricula and Sunday sermons alike. Other religious leaders have spoken out about climate change, but none has commanded blanket media attention like Francis.

Francis signaled from the earliest days of his papacy that he would make the health of the planet a central issue. At his installation Mass in 2013, he asked world leaders to be “protectors of one another and of the environment.” He adopted a more eco-friendly lifestyle, favoring smaller cars and modest living quarters.

People hold copies of Pope Francis' encyclical on climate change on June 18, 2015 at the Vatican.

The pontiff’s environmental encyclical urges readers to follow his lead. The document, titled Laudato Si’ (“Praise Be to You”), expresses dismay about the massive amounts of energy expended just for air conditioning, and signals approval for those who recycle, car pool and turn off lights. There is “nobility” in such “little daily actions,” the pope declares, adding that even reusing an item instead of throwing it out “can be an act of love.”

But it’s not such small stuff that’s the document’s main focus. The encyclical repeatedly condemns modern materialism, warning that the stubborn adherence by a small fraction of the world’s population to “a consumerist lifestyle … can only lead to violence and mutual destruction.” Technology, the pope says, can do much good but has created further division and social inequality. And today’s market-driven modern economies have devastated the planet, leaving it “an immense pile of filth.”

Francis sides unequivocally with the body of science blaming climate change on greenhouse gases that are the byproduct of fossil-fuel use by factories, cars and power plants. The encyclical concedes that factors such as solar cycles may also play a role, but the document pins “most global warming” on “human activity.”

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The pope was “advised by some of the best scientists, and the document seems to reflect that scientific advice,” Pennsylvania State University’s Richard Alley, who studies ice and climate, says via email. From what Alley has seen of the encyclical, the pope “has based his comments on accurate science as well as on his faith.”

The pope’s say-so may not convince those who think climate change is a fraud or, at the very least, the result of natural causes. But the encyclical’s true power lies in its framing of climate change as a profound social injustice, experts say. The pope argues that the sea-level rise and droughts associated with climate change will inflict the greatest suffering on the world’s poorest – while the comfortable lifestyle supported by fossil fuels is enjoyed largely by the world’s rich.

“The climate issue has been seen largely as an economic issue, an environmental issue, but the encyclical makes it a moral issue,” says Dan Bodansky, a former climate-change official in the Clinton and Bush administrations and now a professor at Arizona State University’s College of Law.

Everything about the encyclical was calculated to make a splash. The lengthy, complex document is written not for ordinary Catholics to read on the beach but for “people who can really make a change in the world,” says the Rev. James Bretzke, a professor of moral theology at Boston College. Francis timed the document to land only a few months before he addresses the U.N. and Congress and only six months before international climate-change talks in Paris, Bodansky says, adding that the pontiff’s strategy may indeed pay off.

The encyclical “adds visibility to the issue and political pressure to reach a deal,” Bodansky says. “It’s going to make it that much harder for Paris to fail.”

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Whatever the outcome in Paris, the encyclical is likely to have far-reaching effects, though they may take years to be felt, says Northeastern University’s Matthew Nisbet, who studies the politics and communication of climate change. For moderate Republicans and Catholics who have voted Republican, the pope’s message could “elevate climate change into the box of five issues that they think about” in the voting booth, Nisbet says.

The encyclical signals that Francis himself – who approved and signed the text, though he probably didn’t write much of it, Bretzke says – is keeping his expectations realistic.

“The pope is saying we can’t be tempted by quick and easy fixes,” Bretzke says. “We’ve got to look at the situation in all its complexity and start to do what we can now” – even baby steps like cracking open a window in summertime.

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