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Sunday, 24 November 2024 10:20

Pope Francis meets WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo

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Celeste Saulo, WMO Secretary-General meeting with Pope Francis. (Photo : Vatican Media) - 

 

 

Voinews, Vatican : Pope Francis has met with World Meteorological Organization Secretary-General Celeste Saulo for an audience in which they discussed urgency of concerted efforts to address climate change and to take climate action. 

 

“It’s very moving to be in front of such a great spiritual leader,” said Celeste Saulo after the audience at the Vatican. “It is clear that Pope Francis shares our concerns about climate change and its impacts at the intersection of climate change and inequalities”.  

 

Celeste Saulo has just returned from the UN Climate Change Conference, COP29, in Baku, Azerbaijan, where WMO announced that 2024 is on track to be the world’s hottest year on record and temporarily hit the 1.5°C above pre-industrial times.

 

According to a release received by Voice of Indonesia on Saturday November 23rd 2024 in Jakarta, Greenhouse gas levels, which drive climate change, are at record levels. Sea level rise is accelerating, threatening coastal populations. Glacier retreat is unprecedented damaging ecosystems and threatening long term water security for hundreds of millions of people.

Extreme weather events including devastating floods, persistent droughts, searing heatwaves and wildfires, have caused major loss of life and livelihoods around the world.  

 

“It’s about how we care together for those who are most vulnerable,” said Celeste Saulo after the audience.  

 

She told Vatican News that climate change “will have huge impacts on migration, children, women, indigenous peoples, the more vulnerable who are the ones suffering the most.”

 

 

Pope Francis meets WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo discuss climate change issue. (Photo : Vatican Media) - 

 

The most affected regions, she explained, are Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, along with small island developing countries which are the frontline of rising sea levels. “We need to help them to avoid the consequences of climate change," she stressed.

WMO is one of the leaders of the UN Secretary-General’s Early Warnings For All initiative, which seeks to ensure that everyone on the planet is protected by life-saving early warnings by the end of 2027.

Although considerable progress is being made, much more needs to be done, Mr Guterres told government leaders at COP29.  

Celeste Saulo told the Vatican News that religions can give an important contribution to climate action and to building hope: “Action should be informed by science, but moved by faith”, she said.

She expressed her hope for a closer collaboration in the future with the Holy See: “We have a common agenda and can work together to protect people’s lives and livelihoods,”.

Pope Francis has repeatedly voiced his concern about climate change//VOI

 

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