ROME, Italy
Pope Francis on Wednesday said he would attend the crucial COP28 climate talks starting in Dubai on November 30, weeks after warning that time is running out to act on global warming.
It will be the first time a
pope has attended a COP meeting in person since the process began in 1995.
"I will go to Dubai. I
think that I will leave on December 1 through the 3rd. I'll spend three days
there," the pontiff told Italy's Rai 1 television.
The 86-year-old has made the
environment one of the main themes of his papacy since being elected pope by
cardinals in 2013.
In early October, Francis
published an update on his landmark thesis of the devastation of human-induced
climate change that he released eight years ago, warning some damage was
"already irreversible".
The new papal text,
"Laudate Deum" (Praise to God), was a follow-up to the 2015
encyclical "Laudato Si" ("Praise Be To You").
"Laudato Si" ran to
almost 200 pages and was aimed not just at the world's 1.3 billion Catholics,
but everyone on the planet, a call to global solidarity to act together to
protect "our common home".
With that document, he placed
himself -- and the Church -- firmly behind the science on blaming human
behaviour for climate change.
In "Laudate Deum",
he said the world's responses to global warming "have not been adequate,
while the world in which we live is collapsing and may be nearing the breaking
point".
But he said the Dubai talks
"can represent a change of direction", if participants make binding
agreements on moving from fossil fuels to clean energy sources such as wind and
solar.
Only a real commitment to
change "can enable international politics to recover its
credibility", he wrote.
The pope met Sultan Al Jaber,
the president-designate of the COP28 talks, at the Vatican on October 11.
The appointment of Jaber --
who is head of Emirati energy giant ADNOC -- has drawn criticism from
environmentalists, who denounce the role of the hydrocarbon sector in global
warming.
In his text last month,
Francis referenced concerns about the UN talks being held in the oil-rich
United Arab Emirates, noting that while it was a "great exporter of fossil
fuels" it also made "significant investments" in renewable energy
sources.
"To say that there is
nothing to hope for would be suicidal, for it would mean exposing all humanity,
especially the poorest, to the worst impacts of climate change," wrote
Francis.
The trip to Dubai will be the
45th overseas visit by the pope since he was elected -- and the seventh country
he has visited this year.
He has said he needs to slow
down, however, after suffering a series of health issues in recent years.
The Argentine pontiff
underwent a hernia operation under general anaesthetic in June, two years after
having surgery on his colon.
He also suffers from knee pain
which forces him to use a wheelchair.
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