by Laudato Si’ Movement | Apr 25, 2018 | News and Updates
They include Caritas Internationalis, a Vatican-affiliated humanitarian assistance organization, Catholic banks with €7.5 billion on their balance sheets, and dozens of religious orders and lay movements.
This group of 35 joins 60 Catholic organizations that previously divested. The full list of institutions that divested in this announcement is here.
A video to celebrate the announcement, created by Years of Living Dangerously, is here. The story was covered widely in international press, including Catholic News Service and Vatican news, and in an op-ed in the National Catholic Reporter.
Caritas work in the field | Photography by Trocaire
For institutions like Caritas Internationalis, divesting from fossil fuels serves their mission to address the root causes of suffering and protect “the least of these.”
Its president, Cardinal Luis Tagle, said “The poor are suffering greatly from the climate crisis and fossil fuels are among the main drivers of this injustice. That is why Caritas Internationalis has decided not to invest in fossil fuels anymore. We encourage our member organizations and other groups or organizations connected to the Church to do the same.”
For these financial institutions, maintaining the status quo in funding dirty energy doesn’t serve the long-term well-being of their clients. Divestment is an opportunity to do good as they are doing well.
Clean energy is increasing | Photography by Alex Abian
Archbishop Hollerich | Photography by Guy Wolff
The Archbishop of Luxembourg, Jean-Claude Hollerich, said, “Along with our brothers and sisters in the Church, we, the bishops, are increasingly committed to making financial decisions that are in line with our moral values. Divestment is an important way for the Church to show leadership in the context of a changing climate. Praise be to all those who serve ‘the least of these’ by protecting the environment.” Archbishop Hollerich also serves as president of COMECE, the community of bishops that monitors policy in the European Union, and the president of Justice and Peace Europe, a network of 31 justice and peace commissions of bishops’ conferences.
Tomás Insua, its executive director, said “When it comes to protecting our common home, we have not a moment to lose. Divesting from fossil fuels is important to bending the arc of emissions downward soon. We are grateful to join the growing movement of Catholic institutions away from dirty energy and toward better care of creation. Church leadership on this issue has never been more important.”
Pope Francis and GCCM Executive Director Tomás Insua
In reaction to the news, John O’Shaughnessy, the founder of the Catholic Impact Investing Collaborative, a group of Catholic institutions that collectively manage over $50 billion in assets, said “Divestment from fossil fuels sends an important signal. Financial institutions are well aware that these investments are not sustainable, and indeed that they do long-term harm to their investors and the wider community. Increasingly, wise financial managers are moving away from dirty energy and towards a clean, sustainable future.”
Global Catholic Climate Movement is an international organization of 650+ member organizations and thousands of Catholic people responding to Pope Francis’ call to protect our common home.
Stories and statements written by Laudato Si’ Movement represent the work of the organization and/or more than one staff member of the movement.