GLOBAL BUDDHIST CLIMATE CHANGE COLLECTIVE (GBCCC)
Galvanizing Buddhist Climate Action
October
29th, 2015
We, the
undersigned Buddhist leaders, come together prior to the 21st Session of the
Conference of Parties (COP21) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) in Paris, in order to add our voices to the growing calls for world
leaders to cooperate with compassion and wisdom and reach an ambitious and
effective climate agreement.
We are
at a crucial crossroads where our survival and that of other species is at
stake as a result of our actions. There is still time to slow the pace of
climate change and limit its impacts, but to do so, the Paris summit will need
to put us on a path to phase out fossil fuels. We must ensure the protection of
the most vulnerable, through visionary and comprehensive mitigation and
adaptation measures.
Our
concern is founded on the Buddha’s realization of dependent co-arising, which
interconnects all things in the universe. Understanding this interconnected
causality and the consequences of our actions are critical steps in reducing
our environmental impact. Cultivating the insight of interbeing and compassion,
we will be able to act out of love, not fear, to protect our planet. Buddhist
leaders have been speaking about this for decades. However, everyday life can
easily lead us to forget that our lives are inextricably interwoven with the
natural world through every breath we take, the water we drink, and the food we
eat. Through our lack of insight, we are destroying the very life support
systems that we and all other living beings depend on for survival.
We
believe it imperative that the global Buddhist community recognize both our
dependence on one another as well as on the natural world. Together, humanity
must act on the root causes of this environmental crisis, which is driven by
our use of fossil fuels, unsustainable consumption patterns, lack of awareness,
and lack of concern about the consequences of our actions.
We
strongly support “The Time to Act is Now: A Buddhist Declaration on Climate
Change,” which is endorsed by a diverse and global representation of Buddhist
leaders and Buddhist sanghas. We also welcome and support the climate change
statements of other religious traditions. These include Pope Francis’s
encyclical earlier this year, Laudato
Si’: On Care for Our Common Home, the Islamic
Declaration on Climate Change, as well as the upcoming Hindu Declaration on Climate Change.
We are united by our concern to phase out fossil fuels, to reduce our
consumption patterns, and the ethical imperative to act against both the causes
and the impacts of climate change, especially on the world’s poorest.
To this
end, we urge world leaders to generate the political will to close the
emissions gap left by country climate pledges and ensure that the global
temperature increase remains below 1.5 degrees Celsius, relative to
pre-industrial levels. We also ask for a common commitment to scale up climate
finance, so as to help developing countries prepare for climate impacts and to
help us all transition to a safe, low carbon future.
The good
news is that there is a unique opportunity at the Paris climate negotiations to
create a turning point. Scientists assure us that limiting the rise in the
global average temperature to less than 1.5 degrees Celsius is technologically
and economically feasible. Phasing out fossil fuels and moving toward 100
percent renewable and clean energy will not only spur a global, low-carbon
transformation, it will also help us to embark on a much-needed path of spiritual
renewal. In addition to our spiritual progression, in line with UN
recommendations, some of the most effective actions individuals can take are to
protect our forests, move toward a plant-based diet, reduce consumption,
recycle, switch to renewables, fly less, and take public transport. We can all
make a difference.
We call
on world leaders to recognize and address our universal responsibility to
protect the web of life for the benefit of all, now and for the future.
For these reasons, we call
on all Parties in Paris:
- To
be guided by the moral dimensions of climate change as indicated in Article 3 of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
- To
agree to phase out fossil fuels and move towards 100 percent renewables
and clean energy.
- To
create the political will to close the emissions gap left by country
climate pledges so as to ensure that the global temperature increase
remains below 1.5 degrees Celsius, relative to pre-industrial levels.
- To
make a common commitment to increase finance above the US$100 billion
agreed in Copenhagen in 2009, including through the Green Climate Fund
(GCF), to help vulnerable developing countries prepare for climate impacts
and transition towards a low-carbon economy.
The time to act is now.
Yours sincerely,
His Holiness the Dalai
Lama Tenzing Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama
Zen Master Thich Nhat
Hanh, Patriarch of the Plum Village International Community of
Engaged Buddhists
His Holiness the 17th
Gyalwang Karmapa, Head of the Karma Kagyu
His Holiness Dr.
Dharmasen Mahathero, The
Supreme Patriarch (Sangharaja) of the Bangladesh Sangha
Rev. Hakuga Murayama, President, All Japan Young Buddhist Association (JYBA)
His Eminence Jaseung
Sunim, President, Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism
Bhante B. Sri Saranankara
Nayaka Maha Thera, Chief Adhikarana
Sangha Nayaka of Malaysia , Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
His Eminence Rev. Khamba
Lama Gabju Demberel, The Supreme Head of Mongolian Buddhists
His Holiness Dr.
Bhaddanta Kumarabhivamsa, Sangharaja, and Chairman State Sangha Maha Nāyaka
Committee, Myanmar
His Eminence Agga Maha
Panditha Dawuldena Gnanissara Maha Nayaka Thera, Mahanayaka
Thero, The Supreme Prelate of the Amarapura Maha Nikaya, Sri Lanka
His Holiness Thich Pho
Tue, Supreme Patriarch of All Vietnam Buddhist Sangha
Venerable Lama Lobzang, Secretary General of the International Buddhist
Confederation (IBC)
Rev. Olivier Reigen
Wang-gen, President, Buddhist Union of France (UBF)
Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi, President,
Buddhist Association of the USA
Royal Highness Ashi Kesang Wangmo Wangchuk, Bhutan
No comments:
Post a Comment