COP-27 Report

This blog is part of a 3 part series, go here to read the first article, and here to read the third article.

Being at COP27 was an incredible experience in so many ways. From witnessing global leaders engaging in important conversations, to watching demonstrations from climate activists in solidarity for climate justice, to living across two different time zones at the same time – it went by so quickly! While COP27 is over, our work is really just beginning in sharing the lessons learned and next steps from here. Faith-based organizations present at COP27 brought a powerful moral accountability to a conference that is heavy on policy, politics, and the powerful. Big polluters warm our world, cut our trees, and vanquish our futures in the names of the gods of wealth, greed, and power. They must be held accountable.

Many significant things happened during COP27, here’s a summary of a few that stood out particularly to me:

  • Commitments from the United States (link to report)
    • Set an economy-wide target of reducing its net greenhouse gas emissions by 50-52% below 2005 levels in 2030
    • Set a goal to reach 100 percent carbon pollution-free electricity by 2035
    • Made promises to invest in transportation, construction, carbon capture incentives, and agriculture. 
  • Establishment of a loss and damage fund
    • A historic win that secures funds for countries historically stripped of resource and experiencing the devastation of intensified weather patterns and climate change
    • This win was thanks to the tireless advocacy of environmental justice activists, including from faith communities
    • We are still waiting to see what mechanisms will be employed to distribute these resources
  • Lack of significant progress on ambition
    • We still need a commitment to the complete phasing out of fossil fuels and increased acceleration
    • It is unclear how we will meet the goals promised in the Paris Agreement
    • We saw more fossil fuel delegates than ever at this COP
    • We need to pay attention to the gendered impacts of climate change, and ensure representation of young, women, and gender non-conforming people in decision-making processes

My heart is heavy that these conversations are so slow-moving when we are running out of time. Heavy at the recalcitrance of wealthy nations to center environmental justice. Heavy that those who will suffer most from climate inaction continue to be a political bargaining chip, instead of a moral responsibility.  However, this experience also left me feeling hopeful. Hopeful because I witnessed how a groups of strangers came together to form powerful voices speaking truth on a global stage. Hopeful because with all its flaws COP27 does provide the opportunity for facilitated conversation and unique partnerships that do better our world. Hopeful at the witness of young people, leading conversations and demanding accountability and justice. Hopeful because my faith does not lie exclusively in decision-making bodies, but in the collective power of us, activated by love. Our various traditions invite us to imagine how we participate in this world, love this world, and care for this world. These efforts are never wasted – for we are transformed in the doing, in the process, in the loving, into the kind of people that truly can heal the world. 

Many times over the past two weeks, I’ve returned to the happy memory of my childhood – standing in the mud at the river bank, water lapping gently at my feet. The feeling of my body connecting me to a wild network of ecosystems, intricate workings of which I had no clue. Yet I knew this to be true – this system supported me. It was a sacred place. And it still is, motivating me to work alongside each of you as we seek a faithful response to climate change.

Go here to learn more about National IPL and the faith voice at COP27: https://www.interfaithpowerandlight.org/?s=cop27


This blog was written by PA IPL Executive Director, Katie Ruth. Katie was part of a hybrid delegation to COP27, representing the Office of the Presiding Bishop of the Espicopal Church. Views shared here do not necessarily reflect those of the delegation or Episcopal Church.

COP-27 Overview

This November, the world gathered in Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt, for the 27th United Nations Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC (or COP27) to discuss and implement climate action. 198 countries have ratified the convention, which first took effect in 1994 and hopes to stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations, limit the global temperature increase to 1.5C, and mitigate the dangerous effects of human-induced climate change. More than 100 heads of state and many thousands of delegates convened to review the most pressing climate issues of our time, including climate finance, matters relating to developing countries, gender, and capacity-building under the convention.

By the end of COP27, one issue on the agenda stood above the rest: loss and damage. According to Dr. Adelle Thomas, a lead author on the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) Sixth Assessment Report and the Special Report on 1.5°C, defines loss and damage as the negative impacts of climate change that occur in the absence of mitigation and adaptation, such as infrastructure damage or climate disaster trauma. Vulnerable groups such as women and those of lower socioeconomic status are disproportionately affected by losses and damages, and the effects are felt more heavily in developing countries. If losses and damages are not mitigated, a severe lack of economic output, livelihood, biodiversity, and community will follow. By the time COP27 closed, an agreement had been reached to provide funding that aims to help countries respond to loss and damage, particularly countries in the Global South. A 2022 statement by the Inter-religious Climate and Ecology Network demanded exactly this in September, urging countries in the Global North to recognize their historical role in exacerbating climate change, and to acknowledge that the poorest 50% of the world’s population emit only 7% of global greenhouse gas emissions. 

The understanding that climate change impacts are growing – and that they hit harder for disadvantaged groups and developing countries – is particularly relevant for people of faith. Climate is quickly becoming a focal point of faith discussions all around the world. In 2014, international faith leader and Thiền Buddhist Monk Thich Nhat Hanh wrote in a statement published by the UNFCCC: “Whatever nationality or culture we belong to, whatever religion we follow, whether we’re Buddhists, Christians, Muslims, Jews, or atheists, we can all see that the Earth is not inert matter … cherishing our precious Earth … is not an obligation. It is a matter of personal and collective happiness and survival.” St. Francis of Assisi, declared the patron saint of ecology by Pope John Paul II, wrote in his Canticle of the Creatures, “Praise be to you, my Lord, through our Sister, Mother Earth, who sustains and governs us, and who produces various fruit with coloured flowers and herbs.” His words were echoed by Pope Francis in a 2014 encyclical letter, in which he wrote that the “bond between concern for nature, justice for the poor, commitment to society, and interior peace” is inseparable. Similar sentiments regarding the environment are reflected in Hindu scripture, according to the Hindu American Foundation. This is an assertion that the Hindu Climate Declaration reflects: “We have a dharmic duty for each of us to do our part in ensuring that we have a functioning, abundant, and bountiful planet.” In Turkey in 2015, the Islamic Declaration on Climate Change asserted that “Islam’s teachings, which emphasize the duty of humans as stewards of the Earth and the teacher’s role as an appointed guide to correct behavior, provide guidance to take the right action on climate change.” The Union for Reform Judaism puts forward the concept of pikuach nefesh – the principle that preserving human life is of utmost importance – in regards to our environment. The growth of climate change as a topic of discussion amongst faith communities speaks to the common concerns of justice, stewardship and suffering.

We know that climate change and its deleterious effects should motivate people of faith to take action, but the path forward can be hard to envision on such a large scale. The average person doesn’t have the time, resources, or capability to consider the international perspective in everything that we do. Narrowing our focus to local climate-related concerns is just as helpful and rewarding. Pennsylvania endures its own unique climate challenges worth examining, and one of the most pervasive is fracking. Fracking is the more commonly-repeated name for hydraulic fracturing, the process by which pressurized fluid and other substances (usually sand and various chemicals) are injected via borehole into rock layers beneath the earth. This pressure opens fractures through which oil and natural gas underground can move with more ease, allowing for their extraction. Current guidelines allow for fracking wells to operate within 500 feet of a residence in Pennsylvania. Though some contend that fracking is safe for residents and that current guidelines are effective in protecting public health, research suggests otherwise. According to a new study from the Yale School of Public Health, children who grew up within a mile of a fracking well have an increased risk of developing leukemia – twice as high as children who did not grow up in such proximity. These results suggest that pollutants resulting from fracking are disproportionately affecting children – one of the most vulnerable groups identified by the UNFCCC

Protect Penn-Trafford, a Pennsylvania-based nonprofit that advocated for the rights of residents of Westmoreland and Allegheny counties, identifies leachate as a major public health and environmental concern. Leachate is liquid runoff from landfills. Waste materials from fracking are dumped in these landfills, and exposure to rain creates hazardous liquid. That liquid is then treated in sewage treatment plants and released into rivers and streams, despite the fact that fracking waste can contain radioactive materials which Pennsylvania’s water treatment plants are not equipped to filter out. This water becomes our drinking water. In addition, the Environmental Health Project asserts that fracking releases toxic chemicals into water when fluid from the drilling process contacts water sources, either during the process or during transportation of waste. Spilled water can introduce heavy metals and chemicals into soil, which humans ingest when eating affected food sources, such as livestock and their byproducts.

As we face the growing climate crisis both at home in Pennsylvania and internationally, it becomes imperative that people of faith who care cultivate a meaningful response. Climate change threatens to displace millions (as it did this year in Pakistan) and cause an enormous loss of health, community, and quality of life. No one faith community owns the concept of environmental justice. It follows, then, that no one faith community can lead the response; it must be a continuous interfaith effort to protect our most vulnerable and act as good stewards to the planet.


This blog was written by PA IPL 2022 Fellow, Renika Weimer.

Voting is a Sacred Obligation

By Mike Kennedy, Faith Climate Justice Voter Campaign Manager
August 17, 2022

Rabbi Fred Scherlinder Dobb of Bethesda, Md.’s Adat Shalom Reconstructionist Congregation encouraged an IPL webinar audience that voting is a “sacred obligation” and “awesome opportunity.”

“The Jewish tradition says, if something matters enough, it’s no longer just a good idea,” Dobb, an IPL board member, said during IPL’s August 9 webinar about sermons, divrei Torah, and khutbahs crafted to encourage voting. “It’s mandated. Like charity. You can give even more, but a certain amount of generosity is actually obligatory, not just voluntary. We call it ‘tzedakah’, not just charity, but righteousness and justice.”

“Same for voting and for involvement in the democratic enterprise within a free society. It’s not just a good idea. It’s, religiously speaking, the law. Voting and defending democracy, is, in Jewish parlance, a mitzvah, a sacred obligation that is in turn also an awesome opportunity. I pray that we can all articulate in our own faith language how this is, in fact, a holy imperative for all of us.”

The webinar reminded faith leaders of the importance of using their prophetic voices to call the faithful to live by their most deeply held values in an election year, and that voting is one way we can all bring forth a world rooted in those values.

Imam Mustapha Elturk, President of the North American Islamic Organization in Michigan, said the Prophet Muhammad once stated, “Whoever sees something that is detested, let him change it by hand.”  Elturk added, “I use the word ‘hand’ to mean authority. We could change things through the courts, but more so through the ballot. Go out and vote. Take with your ‘hand’ this ballot and stick it in the (ballot) box.

IPL Board Chair the Rev. Dr. Gerald L. Durley offered important counsel to those who don’t preach. “So if any of you who are not necessarily clergy but you need your (spiritual) leader (to preach on voting), you’ve got to let them know that they have an obligation,” Durley said. “They have been, we call it in our tradition, called for such a time as this, to speak to the conditions of our people.”

“Can I use a word that we don’t use now?,” Durley asked. “Right and wrong. There are certain things that are just not right. It’s not right what these petroleum companies are doing. It’s not right what they’re doing in the gas and fuel. So in (preaching), you’re not talking about red or blue, you’re talking about some basic fundamental ethical questions that need moral answers to, and that will give people the impetus to try to move ahead to make a difference and I think that that’s how you inspire people.”

The full webinar and short answers from it are available here. If you want to offer a message this fall on the importance of voting, let us know here and we will send you a nonpartisan sermon resource document.

Now Available: Video of NEPA IPL Chapter’s May 26th Program

An Interfaith Coalition on the Environment and Climate

On Thursday, May 26th at 12:00pm the Northeast PA Chapter of PA IPL held a lunch meeting to get to know others interested in their faith and the environment and begin a conversation about how we can come together to:

  • honor both the beauty of NEPA and the need to address its environmental challenges
  • be part of spiritually and ecologically informed local solutions
  • learn how our faith communities can be exemplars in the region in renewable energy practices, sustainable/regenerative lifestyles, and living in love with Earth

Sign up here if you would like to join the NEPA IPL Chapter.

Now Available: Video of PA IPL Interfaith Spiritual Care 2022 “Walking Through Life With Active Hope”

Session 1: “The Cry of the Earth”

This meeting, recorded Wednesday, February 23, 2022, was the first of four sessions of PA IPL’s 2022 Interfaith Spiritual Care series, “Walking Through Life With Active Hope.” The theme of our first program is “The Cry of the Earth.” We explore this topic using Joanna Macy’s Active Hope spiral using poetry, meditation, readings, and song.

PA IPL Interfaith Spiritual Care 2022: “Walking Through Life With Active Hope”
Session 1: “The Cry of the Earth”
Wednesday, February 23rd at 7:00pm

This first session of our seasonal programs in 2022 will honor the spiritual gifts with which our creator has blessed us from the natural world. The program will include interfaith prayers, meditation, and music.

This Spiritual Care series provides space for our interfaith work and expressions of our traditions. Each event is designed to help us come together, reconnect, and seek hope as an interfaith community.