The Vatican has voiced concern about Donald Trump’s environmental policies along with other pledges made by the US president.
Cardinal Peter Turkson, prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, told a group of reporters yesterday that there is concern at the Vatican over Trump’s policies, including on the environment.
Trump’s position on immigration and his efforts to roll back US commitments on environmental regulations are “a challenge for us,” said the cardinal, whose office works on both questions and is charged with assisting bishops around the world as they promote Catholic social teaching.
Still, he said, “we are full of hope that things can change.”
The first sign of hope, he said, is the growing number of “dissenting voices,” who are calling attention to the scientific facts surrounding climate change and the ethical obligation to act to protect the environment for current and future generations.
“This, for us, is a sign that little by little, other positions and political voices will emerge, and so we hope that Trump himself will reconsider some of his decisions,” the cardinal said.
“Various American bishops have already spoken about the president’s position, and this could have an influence,” he said.
Perhaps, Trump will come to see that not all the promises he made in the campaign would be good for the country, he added.
A change in position is not impossible, Cardinal Turkson said. “There is another superpower – China – that is rethinking its position” and has allocated funds for programmes to reduce dangerous emissions. “One hopes it is not only because it is a country with ever more smog and pollution.”
The cardinal’s remarks came a day after the chairman of the US bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development said Trump’s executive order calling for a review of the Clean Power Plan jeopardises environmental protections and moves the country away from a national carbon standard to help meet domestic and international goals to ease greenhouse gas emissions.
Bishop Frank J Dewane of Venice, Florida, chairman of the committee, said in a statement earlier this week that the order fails to offer a “sufficient plan for ensuring proper care for people and creation.”
Bishop Dewane suggested that an integral approach involving various components of US society can reduce power plant emissions and still encourage economic growth and protect the environment.
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