A Buddhist
Declaration on Climate Change The Declaration that follows presents a
unique spiritual view of climate change and our urgent responsibility to
address the solutions. It emerged from the contributions of over 20 Buddhist
teachers of all traditions to the book A Buddhist Respose to the Climate
Emergency. The Time to Act is Now was composed as a pan-Buddhist statement by
Zen teacher Dr David Tetsuun Loy and senior Theravadin teacher Ven. Bhikkhu
Bodhi with scientific input from Dr John Stanley.
The Dalai Lama was the first to sign this Declaration. We
invite all concerned members of the international Buddhist community to study
the document and add their voice by co-signing it at the end of this page.
A Buddhist Declaration on Climate Change Divider Today we
live in a time of great crisis, confronted by the gravest challenge that
humanity has ever faced: the ecological consequences of our own collective
karma. The scientific consensus is overwhelming: human activity is triggering
environmental breakdown on a planetary scale. Global warming, in particular, is
happening much faster than previously predicted, most obviously at the North
Pole. For hundreds of thousands of years, the Arctic Ocean has been covered by
an area of sea-ice as large as Australia—but now this is melting rapidly. In
2007 the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) forecast that the
Arctic might be free of summer sea ice by 2100. It is now apparent that this
could occur within a decade or two. Greenland’s vast ice-sheet is also melting
more quickly than expected. The rise in sea-level this century will be at least
one meter—enough to flood many coastal cities and vital rice-growing areas such
as the Mekong Delta in Vietnam.
Glaciers all over the world are receding quickly. If current
economic policies continue, the glaciers of the Tibetan Plateau, source of the
great rivers that provide water for billions of people in Asia, are likely to
disappear by mid-century. Severe drought and crop failures are already
affecting Australia and Northern China. Major reports—from the IPCC, United
Nations, European Union, and International Union for Conservation of
Nature—agree that, without a collective change of direction, dwindling supplies
of water, food and other resources could create famine conditions, resource
battles, and mass migration by mid-century—perhaps by 2030, according to the
U.K.’s chief scientific advisor.
Global warming plays a major role in other ecological
crises, including the loss of many plant and animal species that share this
Earth with us. Oceanographers report that half the carbon released by burning
fossil fuels has been absorbed by the oceans, increasing their acidity by about
30%. Acidification is disrupting calcification of shells and coral reefs, as
well as threatening plankton growth, the source of the food chain for most life
in the sea.
Eminent biologists and U.N. reports concur that “business-as-usual”
will drive half of all species on Earth to extinction within this century.
Collectively, we are violating the first precept—“do not harm living beings”—on
the largest possible scale. And we cannot foresee the biological consequences
for human life when so many species that invisibly contribute to our own
well-being vanish from the planet.
Many scientists have concluded that the survival of human
civilization is at stake. We have reached a critical juncture in our biological
and social evolution. There has never been a more important time in history to
bring the resources of Buddhism to bear on behalf of all living beings. The
four noble truths provide a framework for diagnosing our current situation and
formulating appropriate guidelines—because the threats and disasters we face
ultimately stem from the human mind, and therefore require profound changes
within our minds. If personal suffering stems from craving and ignorance—from
the three poisons of greed, ill will, and delusion—the same applies to the
suffering that afflicts us on a collective scale. Our ecological emergency is a
larger version of the perennial human predicament. Both as individuals and as a
species, we suffer from a sense of self that feels disconnected not only from
other people but from the Earth itself. As Thich Nhat Hanh has said, “We are
here to awaken from the illusion of our separateness.” We need to wake up and
realize that the Earth is our mother as well as our home—and in this case the
umbilical cord binding us to her cannot be severed. When the Earth becomes
sick, we become sick, because we are part of her.
Our present economic and technological relationships with
the rest of the biosphere are unsustainable. To survive the rough transitions
ahead, our lifestyles and expectations must change. This involves new habits as
well as new values. The Buddhist teaching that the overall health of the
individual and society depends upon inner well-being, and not merely upon
economic indicators, helps us determine the personal and social changes we must
make.
Individually, we must adopt behaviors that increase everyday
ecological awareness and reduce our “carbon footprint”. Those of us in the
advanced economies need to retrofit and insulate our homes and workplaces for
energy efficiency; lower thermostats in winter and raise them in summer; use
high efficiency light bulbs and appliances; turn off unused electrical
appliances; drive the most fuel-efficient cars possible, and reduce meat
consumption in favor of a healthy, environmentally-friendly plant-based diet.
These personal activities will not by themselves be
sufficient to avert future calamity. We must also make institutional changes,
both technological and economic. We must “de-carbonize” our energy systems as
quickly as feasible by replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy sources
that are limitless, benign and harmonious with nature. We especially need to
halt the construction of new coal plants, since coal is by far the most
polluting and most dangerous source of atmospheric carbon. Wisely utilized,
wind power, solar power, tidal power, and geothermal power can provide all the
electricity that we require without damaging the biosphere. Since up to a
quarter of world carbon emissions result from deforestation, we must reverse
the destruction of forests, especially the vital rainforest belt where most
species of plants and animals live.
It has recently become quite obvious that significant
changes are also needed in the way our economic system is structured. Global
warming is intimately related to the gargantuan quantities of energy that our
industries devour to provide the levels of consumption that many of us have
learned to expect. From a Buddhist perspective, a sane and sustainable economy
would be governed by the principle of sufficiency: the key to happiness is
contentment rather than an ever-increasing abundance of goods. The compulsion
to consume more and more is an expression of craving, the very thing the Buddha
pinpointed as the root cause of suffering.
Instead of an economy that emphasizes profit and requires
perpetual growth to avoid collapse, we need to move together towards an economy
that provides a satisfactory standard of living for everyone while allowing us
to develop our full (including spiritual) potential in harmony with the
biosphere that sustains and nurtures all beings, including future generations.
If political leaders are unable to recognize the urgency of our global crisis,
or unwilling to put the long-term good of humankind above the short-term benefit
of fossil-fuel corporations, we may need to challenge them with sustained
campaigns of citizen action.
Dr James Hansen of NASA and other climatologists have
recently defined the precise targets needed to prevent global warming from
reaching catastrophic “tipping points.” For human civilization to be
sustainable, the safe level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is no more than
350 parts per million (ppm). This target has been endorsed by the Dalai Lama,
along with other Nobel laureates and distinguished scientists. Our current
situation is particularly worrisome in that the present level is already 387
ppm, and has been rising at 2 ppm per year. We are challenged not only to
reduce carbon emissions, but also to remove large quantities of carbon gas
already present in the atmosphere.
As signatories to this statement of Buddhist principles, we
acknowledge the urgent challenge of climate change. We join with the Dalai Lama
in endorsing the 350 ppm target. In accordance with Buddhist teachings, we
accept our individual and collective responsibility to do whatever we can to
meet this target, including (but not limited to) the personal and social
responses outlined above.
We have a brief window of opportunity to take action, to
preserve humanity from imminent disaster and to assist the survival of the many
diverse and beautiful forms of life on Earth. Future generations, and the other
species that share the biosphere with us, have no voice to ask for our
compassion, wisdom, and leadership. We must listen to their silence. We must be
their voice, too, and act on their behalf.
Divider
http://www.ecobuddhism.org/bcp/all_content/buddhist_declaration/
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