Posts Tagged ‘climate change’

A Catholic Response to Climate Change

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

The work of promoting Fair Trade is more and more joining with the work of fighting climate change. From our work with coffee farmers in Latin America, CRS has known that climate change is already beginning to affect the harvest of small-scale coffee farmers, already struggling to earn a reasonable income. Climate Change Threatens Central American Coffee, a recent article from Reuters, confirms that lack of water and extreme weather systems, are damaging the crops of coffee farmers.

With more drastic changes in climate expected over the next 10-15years, regardless of the altitude of their farm, coffee farmers will need to adapt their farming techniques, and possibly even the crops they farm, to ensure they have a crop to harvest and a continued source of income. As the result of 3 year grant, CRS and our partner CIAT are working on a project called CUP – Coffee Under Pressure: Climate Change Adaptation in Mesoamerica. Through the project we are developing a system to identify how farms at different elevations will be affected by climate change and working with farmers make the appropriate adaptations to their farms.

The article in Reuters stresses the importance of government involvement in the coffee industry to assist farmers and maintain a stable supply of coffee. However, we in the U.S. also have a role to play in stemming the tide of climate change. Catholics Confront Global Poverty, a joint initiative between the USCCB and Catholic Relief Services, invites Catholics to take action on climate change. If you haven’t joined yet, sign up for Catholics Confront Global Poverty!

Here’s why…

“The Catholic Church brings a distinct perspective to the debate about climate change by lifting up the moral dimensions of this issue and the needs of the most vulnerable among us. As Catholics our faith calls us to care for all of God’s creation, especially the ‘least of these’ (Mt 25:40). Of particular concern to the Church is how climate change and the response to it will affect poor and vulnerable people here at home and around the world.” (learn more…)

Mark Earth Day by taking the St. Francis Pledge

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

We thank Dan Misleh of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) for this Earth Day call to action:

As the United States marks Earth Day, USCCB and CRS are among the national Catholic organizations calling on Catholic individuals and families, parishes and schools, religious communities, colleges and hospitals and other Catholic organizations to take a unique St. Francis Pledge to Care for Creation and the Poor.

The efforts of the Catholic Coalition on Climate Change respond to and build upon the leadership of Pope Benedict XVI, the U.S. Catholic Bishops, and many Catholic religious communities who believe that our response to climate change must be guided by the exercise of prudence, the pursuit of the common good and a priority for the poor. A list of coalition members is below.

YOU are asked to take the St Francis Pledge to Care for Creation and the Poor by promising to:
• PRAY and reflect on the duty to care for God’s creation and the poor and vulnerable;
• LEARN about and educate others on both the reality of climate change and its moral dimensions;
• ASSESS your participation in contributing to climate change (i.e. consumption and conservation);
• ACT to change your choices and behaviors contributing to climate change and;
• ADVOCATE Catholic principles and priorities in climate change discussions and decisions, especially as they impact the poor and vulnerable.

The coalition’s website offers concrete help in carrying out the St Francis Pledge with specific ways for Catholics to learn to “tread lightly and act boldly”, reducing your own carbon footprint as an expression of solidarity with those most impacted by climate change.

“The real ‘inconvenient truth’,” according to John Carr of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, “is that those who contribute the least to climate change in our own country and around the world will suffer the most and have least capacity to respond. Poor families and vulnerable workers and farmers are most likely to bear the greatest burdens in responding to climate change. We believe an essential moral measure of the debate and decisions on climate change will be how it helps or hurts the poor and vulnerable in the U.S. and abroad.”

In addition to CRS and USCCB, organizational partners and sponsors of the Covenant Campaign include:

  • Catholic Charities USA serving nearly 8 million people in more than 1700 local Catholic Charities agencies and institutions.
  • The Catholic Health Association of the United States serving one in six Americans in hospitals
  • The National Catholic Education Association, the largest private education system in the world
  • The Conference of Major Superiors of Men and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious representing hundreds of religious communities who lead with a sense of mission and real world examples of how to care for people in poverty and for God’s gift of creation.
  • The Franciscan Action Network,
  • the National Council of Catholic Women
  • the National Catholic Rural Life Conference
  • the National Federation of Priests’ Councils,
  • the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities, and many others.

Climate Contest Update: CRS wins! Farmers win!

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

A very timely greeting from our colleague Michael Sheridan, based in Guatemala:

Happy Earth Day from Latin America! Today Green Mountain Coffee Roasters announced it selected our entry in the Changing Climate Change as one of four winners! We want to thank everyone who logged onto JustMeans over the last month or so to support our entry! Your support and that of Green Mountain means CRS now has the opportunity to work over the next several years with our partners at CIAT (the International Center for Tropical Agriculture). CRS and CIAT will implement the project we are calling CUP—Coffee Under Pressure: Climate Change Adaptation in Mesoamerica. CUP will help the smallholder coffee farmers we accompany adapt more effectively to the likely impacts of climate change.

Smallholder farmer livelihoods are very fragile indeed, and climate change threatens to make them even more vulnerable. We believe this project will help give farmers the information they need to make good decisions about their futures as farmers. Thanks again for helping to make it possible!

To read more recent news from the field, visit the CRS website.

March Madness: Help CRS (and the farmers we serve) score a big win!

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

A big thank you to everyone that voted in the first round of the Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Challenge! Thanks to your votes we’ve advanced to the second round and are even closer to winning $200,000 to help coffee farmers respond to the effects of climate change.

Below you’ll find all the details of our proposal and the voting process. We’ll be sending this out to our CRS network and please send it out to yours. Don’t forget to take a moment to vote for our proposal by this Friday, April 3!

Here’s a note from our colleagues in Latin America. Please note that voting ends Friday.

Great news! Our proposal to help family coffee farmers in Latin America adapt to climate change has been selected as a finalist in the Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Climate Challenge! Since Green Mountain is awarding grants in four categories, I guess you could say we have made the Final Four!

Many thanks to all those who voted to support our project concept during the first round of voting. Now we are on to the second round, and you have only until Friday, April 3, to vote to make it a winner!

The Issue.

Climate change is changing the face of agriculture all over the planet. Since a specific crop can only thrive under certain environmental conditions, the increases in average temperatures and the radical changes in rainfall are changing our understanding of what can grow well where—what we call “land-use patterns.” The outlook for coffee farmers in Mexico and Central America is pretty grim. Under some scenarios, coffee could disappear altogether from some of the leading coffee-growing regions in Central America in the next generation or so.

The Proposal.

We have been invited by our friends at the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) in Colombia to partner to help small-scale family farmers adapt to these changes. We will help CIAT gather data from some of the more than 7000 farmers who are participating in our CAFE Livelihoods project in Mexico and Central America. CIAT will use that data to support its very fancy “crop targeting” models that help show land-use patterns will likely change over time in the places where we are working. Together, we will share that information with farmers and help them make better decisions about how they will farm into the future.

The Process.

Green Mountain has developed a creative two-tier system for this particular version of March Madness. On one level, the company has invited folks like you all around the world to vote for the proposals you like best at JustMeans. That process ends on April 3. On another level, Green Mountain has assembled a team from within its company to review the proposals and vote (kind of like the popular vote and the electoral college). Once the votes are in, Green Mountains “electors” will take them and the proposals into consideration and announce a winner on Earth Day, April 22.

What You Can Do.

Log on and vote! Ask your friends and families and neighbors to do the same! (FYI,you will need to register with JustMeans in order to vote.)

Vote Against Change and Help Coffee Farmers

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Climate change that is.

“Change” is a big buzz word these days, but in the case of the climate, sometimes change is NOT a good thing. That’s why the Catholic Relief Services (CRS) Fair Trade program is asking you to voice your support for a project that will help CRS and coffee farmers better understand and plan for the impacts of climate change.

Our CRS program in Latin America is responding to a recent climate change “Request for Proposals” from Green Mountain Coffee Roasters. You can help the proposal by voting for our submission, which we are developing with our partners at the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT). CIAT will be gathering data to generate sophisticated maps showing how crop patterns are changing over time due to climate change. CRS will bring this critical information to the more than three dozen coffee cooperatives that are participating in our CAFE Livelihoods project in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua. Together we will conduct qualitative research to make sure the data matches what the coffee farmers are experiencing. Then CRS will work with the cooperatives to design strategies that help them to respond effectively to the major changes occurring in the world around them. In a way, then, you CAN vote for positive change: helping coffee farmers anticipate and shape change for their benefit!

Casting your vote for the work of CRS/CIAT is easy. On a dedicated microsite at JustMeans, Green Mountain has created a voting function as a kind of “People’s Choice award” that will feed into the company’s decision-making processes. When you click on the project you’ll be ask to register–we don’t want voter fraud you know–and that takes just a few seconds. Then you can cast your vote for CRS/CIAT (and actually you have a total of 10 ballots so check out the other ideas too!). Please also help us spread the word. Tell your colleagues, friends, families, neighbors, dentists, babysitters, yoga instructors, baristas, etc. that they can vote for coffee farmer empowerment in the face of climate change!

Thanks for your vote and we’ll be sure and keep you updated on the proposal process. Voting ends soon! We’ll also use this space to share resources for how you can act to prevent the worst ravages of climate change in the first place!

Catholics Confront Global Poverty

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Katy, Mary and I have been busy this week with the Annual Catholic Social Ministry Gathering in Washington, DC. Besides the fun of sipping Fair Trade coffee from our partners, Higher Grounds, Beans for Better Life, Grounds for Change, Nectar of Life, Equal Exchange and Larry’s Beans, and reuniting with Fair Trade Ambassadors, a highlight has been the launch of the Catholics Confront Global Poverty campaign.

Working with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), Catholic Relief Services calls on one million Catholics in the United States to confront global poverty. Our two organizations are taking up a range of advocacy efforts to end hunger, disease, conflict, and other issues that affect the lives of our brothers and sisters worldwide. Here are the key objectives:

* reform global trade and agriculture policies
* use natural resources in ways that protect the environment and benefit poor persons
* address global climate change and help poor countries mitigate and adapt to it
* complete debt relief
* increase poverty-focused international assistance
* promote comprehensive immigration reform and confront the root causes of migration
* strengthen international peacekeeping and peacebuilding initiatives

On this holy day of Ash Wednesday, we invite you to join us!