#CongoBasin

2025-11-16

To fix the climate, simply empower #Indigenous people

by Kiki Taufik, 10 Nov 2025

"Climate change is the defining issue of our age. While nations search for complex technological solutions at this year’s high-stakes climate meeting in the Amazon city of #Belém, a simpler yet powerful answer has been waiting in the wings. I saw it firsthand in the forests of #WestPapua’s Bird’s Head Peninsula in the company of #IndigenousYouth from the Amazon, the #CongoBasin, and #Borneo.

"They showed me a truth that the world has been overlooking: one of the most effective climate solutions lies in empowering Indigenous people.

"In this way, we can prevent an immense amount of carbon emissions from #deforestation and preserve priceless #biodiversity and all the benefits we reap from it. It’s a strategy that more than pays for itself."

news.mongabay.com/2025/11/to-f

#SolarPunkSunday #MongaBay #SiraDeclaration #ClimateChange #UNDRIP #FPIC #AmazonRiverBasin #IndigenousPeople #IndigenousSolutions #TraditionalIndigenousKnowledge

Quantum Splashquantum_splash
2025-11-09
Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-10-29

Africa: If Threatened and Ignored Congo Basin Rainforests Vanish, 'Africa Is Not Viable': [Daily Maverick] Conservationists are trying to pull the Congo Basin's plight out of the shadows and into the light of scientific research. Conservationist Lee White says it is Africa's beating heart and without its rainforests the continent will be in big trouble. newsfeed.facilit8.network/TNy0 #CongoBasin #RainforestConservation #SaveAfrica #ClimateAction #Biodiversity

Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-10-22

Africa: Congo Basin Forests Hold Trillions in Untapped Value - New Report Calls for Strategic Global Investment: [World Bank] Washington -- The Congo Basin, home to the world's second-largest tropical rainforest, holds immense value for not only the six countries it spans, but for the planet. A new World Bank report reveals the region's forests are not only essential for climate stability and biodiversity,… newsfeed.facilit8.network/TNpn #CongoBasin #Forests #ClimateChange #Biodiversity #Sustainability

Jens Notroffjens2go
2024-06-10

Extensive and continent-wide exchange between different hunter-gatherer groups in the preserved a cultural that evolved thousands of years ago, University of study suggests:

idw-online.de/en/news834135 via @idw_online

Lukas VFN 🇪🇺animalculum@scholar.social
2024-04-08

The unique plant biodiversity of the Central African bemba forests stories.rbge.org.uk/archives/3

"Deep in the #forests of the #CongoBasin there is a species of tree which is doing something truly remarkable. In these hotspots of #biodiversity, where every tree is typically a different species to its neighbour, this species forms almost pure stands... up to 90% of the #trees reaching the #canopy are G. dewevrei. The local name for this tree is bemba, and the forests it creates are truly beautiful."

four young researchers, three black and one white, next to a huge trunk of a tropical tree

Our new briefing on the central Congo Basin peatlands. Congratulations to the whole CongoPeat team, and thanks for sharing so much about this extraordinary tropical forest ecosystem and its people. #peatlandsmatter

RT @CongoPeat on Twitter - Policy brief from @unepwcmc shares major findings from five years of research into the #CongoBasin peatlands, under the @CongoPeat scientific programme.

Read the brief: congopeat.net/briefings/

Thatching material made from Raphia fronds
2023-09-08

The Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (ASFA) recently held a meeting in Kinshasa to argue for the reorienting of food production around agroecology in the Congo Basin.

Civil society groups, donors, government representatives and small-scale farmers gathered to exchange views on challenges and solutions to food security.

By Elodie Toto
news.mongabay.com/2023/09/drc-

#News #Conservation #Environment #Africa #CongoBasin #Agriculture #Agroecology

2023-07-26

Hey everyone, I've got a major request. 🧵

For the past four months I've been working with the #Africa team at @mongabay examining the critical issues facing the #CongoBasin and putting it all together in a podcast series.

To call this daunting is a vast understatement. Despite the challenges, I am really proud of the work we are doing. We've summarized some really complex topics in a format I think people will appreciate.

I want as many people to listen to it as possible. Want to help us out?

2023-07-04

Hey! Thanks for the follow everyone!

If you're interested to hear my latest work, I recommend you listen to my #podcast series on the #CongoBasin which I've been releasing in installments over the past couple months.

Episodes 1 - 3 are out now. You can find them by clicking the linktree in by bio, or searching "Mongabay Explores" on the podcast provider of your choice.

Ivindo River in Gabon. . Photo credit: ZB / Mongabay
2023-07-04

Greeting new followers. Some folks have migrated here with the continued degradation of the bird site. Time for another #introduction

I’m Mike and I’m an American audio/visual journalist based in Sydney #Australia.

If you listen to the podcasts at @mongabay thats my voice.

I cover a very wide range of topics and locations including #NewGuinea #CongoBasin #ClimateChange #Solutions #Deforestation and #HumanRights.

A rainy day in Sydney.
2023-06-30

Great apes are on track to lose 94% of their range to climate change by 2050 if humans do nothing to address the problem, according to research.

In this episode of Mongabay Explores, experts speak with Mongabay about the threats to bonobos and mountain gorillas, the importance of great apes for the protection of Congo Basin rainforest, and ways forward for conservation.

from @MikeDiGirolamo

news.mongabay.com/2023/06/big-

#conservation #CongoBasin #Apes #Africa #Wildlife #Trafficking

2023-06-30

Great #apes in the #CongoBasin are in a heap of trouble, for a variety of reasons.

Saving them is a daunting task, but there's massive potential. I spoke about it with 4 experts who have worked in the DRC and Uganda to get an overview on the problems and promises of great ape #conservation.

Listen to my latest episode on the @Mongabay Explores podcast.

news.mongabay.com/2023/06/big-

2023-05-16

My latest on the @mongabay Explores podcast was a massive effort, so I hope you enjoy this episode diving into a very sensitive topic: fortress conservation.

Can we right the wrongs that local communities have had to face, restore land rights and work towards an inclusive model of conservation? These are questions we ask on this latest episode.

news.mongabay.com/2023/05/cong

#Podcast #Conservation #IndigenousRights #IndigenousLand #IndigenousCommunities #Africa #CongoBasin

OceanflynnOceanflynn
2022-11-11

Deforestation increased ↑ by 5% in 2021 whose "forests and peatlands spans 2006 African countries

Its is 2nd in size to the Amazon rainforest

35% covered by 150+ oil&gas blocks

's "forests and peatlands spans 2006 African countries:

* Cameroon ↑
* Central African Republic ↑
* Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) formerly Zaire ↑
* Republic of the Congo (Congo-Brazzaville) ↓
* Equatorial Guinea ↑
* Gabon ↓

theglobeandmail.com/world/arti

The African continent is only responsible for only 2-3 percent of the world’s carbon dioxide emission from industrial sources. But it is alarmingly suffering from the effects. Africa has the potential to mitigate the effects of climate change due to its tropical forests.

The Congo Basin’s rainforests is sometimes called Earth’s second lungs after the Brazil’s Amazon because of its ability to absorb carbon. In addition to that, the basin has the world’s largest tropical peatlands discovered in 2017. Scientists estimates that these peatlands store carbon worth 20 years of the fossil fuel emissions of the US. (Peatlands are terrestrial wetland ecosystems in which waterlogged conditions prevent plant material from fully decomposing). The Congo Basin is also rich in biodiversity and in minerals.

As long as this region is not destroyed, Africa has the potential to help combat and fight against global climate change.

The Congo Basin rainforest face serious threats from global climate change and other human factors( given Congo has been facing insecurities and political crisis since the time during colonization until today). Commercial logging, mining, extensive agriculture, infrastructure development, rapid urbanisation, energy consumption and transnational wildlife poaching among others.

The effects of climate change in Eastern Africa

Recently, The Democratic Republic of the Congo announced it will auction oil and gas permits in Congo Basin which is the home to critically endangered mountain gorillas.

Hydrocarbons minister Didier Budimbu said the DRC was expanding an auction of oil exploration blocks to include two sites that overlap with Virunga National Park, a UNESCO World heritage site.

This planned sale already included permits in the Cuvette Centrale Tropical peatlands in north-west of the country.

The Congo Basin is the only major rainforest that absorb in more carbon than it emits and experts have described it as the worst place in the world to explore fossil fuel. The Congo Basin rainforest spans six countries and regulates rainfall as far as Egypt.

Budimbu defended this claims, by saying “we have primary responsibility towards Congolese taxpayers who, for the most part, live in conditions of extreme precariousness and poverty, and aspire to a socioeconomic wellbeing that oil exploitation is likely to provide for them,”.

In 2021, the Coltan production in DRC amounted to 700 tons, making this country the largest producer of coltan in the world by far.

Coltan is indispensable to the manufacture of all modern technological devices. The mineral is refined to tantalum powder, which is used to make heat-resistant capacitors in laptops, cellphones, and other high-end electronic devices.

The global coltan market was valued at US$1,504.81 million in 2019. It is expected to reach US$1,933.92 million by the end of 2026, growing at a rate of 5.58% a year between 2021 and 2026.

The mining of coltan is usually related to environmental degradation, violence, child labour and death, which most people call ‘Congo curse’. The question remained, if Budimbu and his government are unable to manage and control the mining of coltan and other minerals which have become more problems to the people of Congo and are generating significant amount to ease poverty in the country, how will they manage the proceeds from from oil in the Congo Basin to benefit the people of Congo as he claim?

#africa #climate-change #congo-basin #drc

https://schoolforafrica.org/africa/congo-basin-climate-crisis-in-africa/

DRC is selling it's vast Congo Basin for oil drilling
After the Amazon rain forest has tipped over (produces net CO2), let’s head vor the congo basin and pump some oil there! Sounds like a good idea — what could possibly go wrong?? #climatecrisis #leaveitintheground #congobasin

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/24/world/africa/congo-oil-gas-auction.html

Paris World Summit of Conscience, International interfaith gathering #3

Not only a political economic or ecological issue but the future of humanity that is at stake.

“Climate change is the defining challenge of our time. It affects us all, but it does not affect us all equally. We have a profound responsibility to protect and assist the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people and to pass on to future generations a planet that is thriving and healthy.”

Continuation of  ‘Paris World Summit of Conscience, International interfaith gathering’ #1 & 2

2015, July 21, Paris Why do I care Interreligious meeting

For people who believe in the Divine Creator God and honour and worship Him there is no question that we can keep ourselves at the side and do nothing to change the way the world is behaving at the moment. Jews, Non-trinitarian and trinitarian Christians, Muslims who do know their Holy Scriptures are aware that man has no excuse how he treats the creation of the Most High.

Perhaps people may be a little bit selfish, in a certain way,trying to make a nice living and trying to make a better place for themselves. And it can well be that “Selfishness” does not have to mean being shortsighted and harmful to others, but we all do have to know what ever we do for ourselves may also effect the life of others. Often we find Christians thinking they are the only ones who have an idea about God’s creation and respect it. Some of them, like several atheists may see that man in his position has to play an important role in that universe. They see the dangers of our way of living at the moment. They fear climate change and know we do have something to do against it.

But also people from other religions, like Hindus as Mahamandeshwar Swami Avdeshanand Giri, religious leader of the Hindu Dharma Acharya Sabha, India, said they saw climate change both as an existential threat and as an opportunity for renewal.In the afternoon reverend Takayuki Ashizu, Chief priest of Munakata Grand Shrine (Japan) was part of a discussion pannel with Jean-Luc Fauque, President of the Supreme Council of the European Confederation – the Scottish Rite,  Rev. Fletcher Harper, Director of GreenFaith (USA), Sister Chan Khong, representative of the Thich Nhat Hanh Community (France), Fr. Dominique Lang, Chaplain of Pax Christi France, Author of the blog “Churches and Ecology”, and Mr Henrik Madsen, CEO DNV-GL, Norway.

Hindu leader Nandita Krishna, who has restored 50 sacred forests, feared that insatiable greed had gripped everyone on earth and this had led to climate change.

“We cannot replicate the environment or create it. Unless we see the divine in creation we will not understand our role and duty as humans,”

she said.

Bishop Nathan Kyamanywa, Bishop of Bunyoro Kitara (Uganda) was in charge of the Keynote addresses of the third plenary.

Bringing the day into its discussion between panelists Dr Vinya Ariyaratne, Director of the Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement (Sri Lanka), M. Swami Amritasvarupananda, Amma’s representative (India), Sheikh Khaled Bentounes, Spiritual Guide of the Alawiyya Sufi brotherhood (Algeria), M Sailesh Rao, Director of “Climat Healers Initiative for Transformations” (USA), Ms Alina Saba, Environnemental activist (Nepal) and Bishop Frederick Onael Shoo, Founder of the Lutheran Movement for the Environment in Africa (Tanzania).

Guide spirituel de la Tariqa Alâwiyya, Cheikh Khaled Bentounes

Sheikh Bentounes, leader of the Sufi brotherhood Alawiya, urged mankind to carry “a hope of a future”.

Rabbi David Rosen, international director of Inter Religious Affairs “of the American Jewish Committee said:

“Climate change takes place where there is unbridled avarice. It is a symptom of the disease and cry for us to respond. It is the opportunity for humans to rediscover the higher values than materialism and indulgence.”

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, leader of 300 million Orthodox Christians, despaired at humanity’s blindness, but quoted writer Fyodor Dostoevsky saying that

“beauty would save the earth”.

For him as for many others it is clear that scientists and theologians agree that humanity depends on nature. Therefore he made an urgent appeal:

We must accept the moral imperative for action. Religion must also be involved in the crucial question of climate change.”

Mary Robinson, who served as the seventh, and first female, President of Ireland from 1990 to 1997, and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, from 1997 to 2002, as President of the Mary Robinson Foundation- Climate Justice, found it truly inspiring to see leaders at this meeting in Paris from so many faiths and secular traditions, and to hear of their impressive commitment to the simple yet deeply profound message: “why I care”.

She said

Our lived experiences, our religious beliefs and our cultural backgrounds may be diverse – but you are showing that great traditions have a shared sense of morality and fairness, and a collective recognition of the need to act on climate change to protect people and our common home.

For her this is an example of human solidarity at work.

She outlined why she believes that it is this human solidarity that is the key to igniting
global will to act on the climate.

The idea of human solidarity is sometimes misunderstood. Some people say that it is a well-meaning moral guideline, but it does not help political leaders to conduct negotiations and reach complicated legal agreements – including those that will be needed to reach a climate agreement in Paris later this year.

and said why she disagreed with this view.

Because if we look past all the complex science, economics, legal arguments and political negotiations which are necessary parts of the process towards a climate agreement, we can see that acting on climate change can be summarised very simply:
we can solve climate change if we care about each other, and if we act to help each other.

Passing those two tests is the challenge of our generation, and will decide whether we leave our children and grandchildren a safe world of hope and fairness, or a world where climate change is causing misery and stress.

She spend a lot of time listening to people all around the world, and she thinks that a lot more people care about fairness and our collective future than we sometimes realise.

All across the world, people are witnessing the damage to lives and livelihoods caused by climate change, and are standing up to say that it is time to act.

At the meeting those present have shown the deep level of thinking that underpins why
different people care in different ways about climate action. So she strongly believes that
the first component of igniting climate action is already well underway,

and today is a very important milestone in that process.
So perhaps the next challenge is to move from understanding why we must act on climate, to understanding how we collectively overcome the diverse obstacles to action faced by different people in different places around the world.

We have to realise that peoples from throughout the developing world have their role to play.

There is no solution to climate change without the developing world. This is because most of the energy supply, buildings and transport infrastructure that has yet to be built will be in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Most of the supply of nutritious food to feed an ever more populous world will come from the same places. And the world’s major forests –
including the Amazon, Congo Basin and the forests of South East Asia – are in exactly the same regions. Energy, transportation, forests, agriculture – these will either be managed in a way that over-uses fossil fuels, locks in greenhouse emissions and damages our world, or in a way that protects people and preserves our natural home.
But energy, transportation and agricultural systems are not abstract concepts.
They are fundamentally about people, and their legitimate desire for development. And despite all the economic models and theoretical blueprints, we still live in a world where
too many people are prevented from making a low carbon development choice. We have to change the reality where poverty means that up to three billion people, mainly women, still cook using dangerous and dirty energy sources – the black carbon that comes from this use of coal, charcoal and wood makes an enormous contribution to climate change
as well as to deaths and ill-health.

This is the reason why forest communities must be able to work with others to protect their forests, which was also stated earlier in the afternoon. She also wanted to ad that farmers must be free to find ways to move to more sustainable practices –

together deforestation and agricultural practices are about a fifth of all greenhouse gas emissions.
Indigenous peoples must be able to continue their traditional practices that help to preserve the innumerable benefits provided by our natural world.
The hundreds of millions of people living in slums across the world need access to affordable, sustainable food and energy – and to be consulted in the world-wide
drive for sustainable cities because they will form the majority of the population that will live in them.

For her the whole world needs the people of the developing world to be able to use their innovation and their energy to create a new model of low carbon and equitable development.

Her foundation, which she set up to promote climate justice, summarises this new development model as zero carbon, zero poverty –

and we are certain that we can achieve these dual outcomes with the right kind of international co-operation.

she said.

Though she is also aware that this includes the need for international financing for climate action – not as aid, but rather as part of the collective global recognition that while today’s rich countries built their prosperity from fossil fuels and unsustainable land use, leaders from the developing world are trying to find a way to a more sustainable model of developing without emissions.

The United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change provides the platform for advancing this international  co-operation – and Minister Fabius and the French Government, as hosts of the Paris climate meeting, have been impressive in their recognition of the need for a mature discussion about the approach to international climate finance.

She ended her speech by reminding us that

we can solve climate change if we care about each other, and if we help each other.
But this possibility will only be realized if concerned citizens, organisations and businesses from across the world build informed, respectful partnerships with those who are willing to lead in the developing world.

She is finds it positive that there are many other individuals and organisations who are already thinking deeply about individual pieces of the climate puzzle. Women’s groups. Youth groups. Progressive businesses. Trades Unions. Grass-roots activists. In all countries, rich and poor.

She strongly urged those present to build from this meeting and reach out to all these groups.

If you do, your work today can be the spark that ignites an unprecedented wave of human
solidarity in the cause of climate action. You can gather into a “big tent” those who represent, and understand the lives of, billions of people.
Together, this movement can truly change the world.

she said.

On 1st January, 2016, the Sustainable Development Goals become the new development agenda for our world. Many believe we should mark that day with special prayer and
reflection to bring us together as a human family.
Together, we can show the world that human solidarity is not only the domain of religions and human rights activists. Rather it is the golden key that unlocks the collective power of billions of people.  Those people can act together to build a more resilient world, stabilise our climate, and create an unprecedented attack on global poverty and inequality.

86-year-old Benin writer and politician Albert Teveodjré represented the views of secular thinkers.

“Nature was loaned to us as a place to live. I witness a world of profit at all costs which will ruin the environment and devastate everything. I am very worried. I think I will leave the world with many worries.”

Laurent Fabius, Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development, COP21 President, delivered the closing speech at the Summit of Conscience at the Economic, Social and Environmental Council.
Following the informal ministerial conferences on July 20 and 21, which mobilized the international community at the political level, this event will provide an opportunity to address civil society and, beyond that, the public, in order to ensure the success of COP21.

The Summit has seen the launch of the “Green Faith in Action” project, a global initiative stemming from a coalition of partners with the objective of rendering pilgrimage destinations of all religious and spiritual persuasions, low-carbon cities resilient to climate disruptions. Three hundred million pilgrims travel to these cities each year.

As I wrote already in an other posting we do have to go “Forward ever, backwards never!” and should not only look for positive constructive dreams, which lead us further to the right path, but should also get more people involved in trying to work and motivate others to work at a balance in our position in creation and to find a good way to live in respect to nature. Let us for some moment think also that “Less… is still enough” and that we can, if we are inventive enough, find ways to still have more than we need, living in Luxury, without damaging nature around us. sometimes it would not be bad to take on ‘A bird’s eye and reflecting from within’. Let us look at what is going on, how we can stop the bad evolution, twist the curve of the negative way and come to a good healthy path for all creatures in the world.

*

The 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will take place in Paris in December this year. An effective and equitable international agreement will be critical for reducing greenhouse gas emissions to limit global temperature rise to 2 degree Celsius and for supporting adaptation to climate impacts. France, as the host and chair of COP21, is committed to the role of an impartial facilitator for forging an ambitious agreement at COP 21.

ending the day with the speakers handing over the baton to the children

+

Preceding articles:

Paris World Summit of Conscience, International interfaith gathering #1

Paris World Summit of Conscience, International interfaith gathering #2

Climate change guilty of doing too little

Postponing once more

Forms of slavery, human trafficking and disrespectful attitude to creation to be changed

Vatican against Opponents of immigration

Mayors from all over the world at the Vatican to talk about climate change

++

Additional reading:

  1. Stopping emissions will not stop the warming of our planet
  2. Voice for the plebs
  3. Temperatures rising
  4. Science, 2013 word of the year, and Scepticism
  5. 2014 To remember our Earth
  6. USA Climate Change Action Plan
  7. 2015 Summit of Consciences for the Climate
  8. Vatican meeting of mayors talking about global warming, human trafficking and modern-day slavery
  9. Senator Loren Legarda says climate change not impossible to address
  10. Burgemeesters in het Vaticaan tegen moderne slavernij en klimaatverandering
  11. Top van het geweten voor het klimaat in Parijs
  12. A look at materialism
  13. Less… is still enough
  14. Less for more
  15. Luxury
  16. Material wealth, Submission and Heaven on earth
  17. Summermonths and consumerism
  18. Looking at a conservative review of Shop Class As Soul Craft
  19. Your position about materialistic desires having conquered the world
  20. Message of Pope Francis I for the 48th World Communications Day
  21. From Winterdarkness into light of Spring
  22. Not holding back and getting out of darkness
  23. Learning that stuff is just stuff
  24. Why “Selfishness” Doesn’t Properly Mean Being Shortsighted and Harmful to Others
  25. How to Find the Meaning of Life and Reach a State of Peace
  26. Forward ever, backwards never!
  27. A bird’s eye and reflecting from within

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Find the main site of this project: Why do I care

+++

Further reading:

  1. What’s it worth, planet earth, what are you prepared to do?
  2. Climate change and security: here’s the analysis, when’s the action?
  3. Latest on Climate Change
  4. Climate Change; The Burning Question
  5. Climate Change: New resources for readers
  6. Phyllis Trible on Genesis 1, Dominion, and Ecology
  7. Integral Ecology and Respect for Human Life
  8. Environmental Ethics – Readings in Theory and Application – Fifth Edition
  9. All is Connected
  10. Public History Journal Part 5: Human Ecology
  11. Our Common Responsibility
  12. Shocking quote from Pope Francis’ new encyclical
  13. Pope Francis – The earth as our sister
  14. Pope Francis – He’s not suggesting a return to the Stone Age
  15. Pope Francis – God calls us to commit to the environment
  16. Pope Francis – The lack of universal truth has led to environmental and social damage
  17. Pope Francis – Environmental ethics is social ethics
  18. Pope Francis – We fool ourselves into thinking nothing will happen
  19. Pope Francis – Beauty as a politics against consumerism
  20. Pope Francis – Man thinks he is free as long he is free to consume
  21. Pope Francis – The current political and economic strategy does not solve the problem
  22. Pope Francis – When man gives priority to himself everything becomes relative
  23. Pope Francis – Consumerism level all cultures
  24. Pope Francis – Consumerism makes the world less rich and beautiful
  25. Pope Francis – We are one single human family
  26. If You’re Too Busy to Read Laudato Si, Now You Can Listen to It!
  27. Laudato Si! and Lifestyle
  28. On Care for Our Common Home
  29. Blue Moon and Laudato Si’
  30. Reflection on Laudato Si by Pope Francis (Part IV)
  31. Still reading…
  32. The Pope Hits a Triple!
  33. Bob Thurman: The Pope Hits a Triple
  34. Pell hoists himself on his own logic
  35. The Cut Flower of Creation
  36. What’s This?
  37. A Breath of Fresh Air
  38. Intentional Life
  39. Little things matter.
  40. Parishes Respond to Laudato Si’
  41. So How Cool is Pope Francis?
  42. Dr. Willie Soon on the Vatican’s repeat of its Galileo debacle
  43. The Pope Scare: A New McCarthyism Spitting in the Face of Christ
  44. Thoughts About Elizabeth Johnson’s “Ask the Beasts” after Pope Francis’s Creation-Care Encyclical
  45. Young climate bloggers lobby their MPs and reflect on Laudato Si’
  46. The Galilean Shaman and Ecological Conversion
  47. Sisters & Brothers You Never Knew You Had
  48. …he would call creatures, no matter how small, by the name of ‘brother’ or ‘sister’
  49. Earthly Advice from Pope Francis
  50. Laudato Si
  51. Hidden Seeds in Laudato Si by Peg Conway
  52. Papal Encyclical Laudato Si’ and CAFOD’s Petition
  53. A Special Addu Day for Laudato Si!
  54. The genius of Laudato Si’ should make us all uncomfortable
  55. Article by Leonardo Boff on the Popes’s Encyclical
  56. Catholicism on Economics
  57. Why Pope Francis’ Criticism of Capitalism Makes Sense
  58. Of Kings, and Popes, and Abortions, and the Environment
  59. Boundless Creation
  60. Quotes, Thoughts, Reflections on Non-dualism, evolution, God, ecology, War and more…
  61. The Tragedy of The Commodity
  62. Kingdom of God Stewardship Meet the 50 to 1 Project
  63. Kingdom Stewardship Meet the 50 to 1 Project
  64. “Climate Scientism is Made of Green Cheese”.
  65. Wildflower Wednesday
  66. Idea for the day on complexity science and a new philosophy for life
  67. Hope Springs Eternal
  68. Digital tools for environmental field researchers and citizen scientists.
  69. Humans
  70. Human and Biodiversity
  71. Stanford research finds climate change regulation burden heaviest on poor
  72. Fantastic George Monbiot quote
  73. Musicians as activists, and tales from the Clinton White House
  74. On the Road to Paris
  75. Climate Change Update: FOCUS 2015 and Preparing for COP-21 in Paris
  76. COP 21 à Paris en décembre 2015: mobilisations.
  77. Why CBCP “welcomes” UN Climate Change Conference 2015 [Document]
  78. My reflections of Rebuilding Justice, London

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