February 18 Global Carbon Fast Begins – World Council of Churches

Today’s global economy is shaped by extractivism – a way of living that treats Earth as something to be used up rather than cared for. Extractivism removes coal, oil, gas, forests, water, and minerals on a massive scale, often leaving behind polluted land, broken ecosystems, and harmed communities. This approach fuels climate change and biodiversity loss through the use of fossil fuels, deforestation, industrial agriculture, meat overconsumption, and the constant pressure for economic growth at any cost.

The people who bear the greatest burdens are usually those who did the least to cause the crisis – Indigenous communities, small-scale farmers, coastal peoples, and those living in the Global South. Extractivism leads to polluted air, toxic water, poor health, loss of land, disappearing livelihoods, and forced displacement of human and biodiversity species. These are not only environmental wounds but spiritual and moral ones.

In response, the World Council of Churches, together with regional ecumenical councils and ecumenical partners, invites the global Christian family into a global systemic carbon fast – a spiritual journey of prayer, reflection, and collective action that seeks not only to reduce personal carbon footprints but to reshape the systems that drive exploitation and destruction of the web of life.

What Is a Systemic Carbon Fast?

Traditional carbon fasts focus on personal lifestyle changes that reduce high-emission activities, such as using less energy, eating plant-based meals, and reducing waste. These acts are very important, but they are not enough to address the scale of today’s crisis.

A systemic carbon fast goes further. It asks churches, congregations, and ecumenical networks to confront the economic structures that shape our collective ways of living that harm both human communities and creation, and to take bold steps toward life-giving alternatives. A systemic carbon fast asks us to:

    • examine how our lifestyles are connected to economic systems that fuel climate change, biodiversity loss, and other environmental harms,
    • challenge the structures that normalise exploitation,
    • stand with communities resisting harmful extractive projects,
    • shift policies and practices of government, religious organizations, and other institutions toward justice and sustainability,
    • strengthen alternatives that embody God’s vision of enough for all.

This fast transforms not only values and habits, but also policies, relationships, systems, and the future. This fast says: We choose enough rather than excess.  We choose community over consumption. We choose justice over sacrifice zones.

Contact Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon or Creation Justice Ministries to learn more.

Global faith campaign for climate justice launched by World Council of Churches

Commission on Climate Justice and Sustainable Development

The World Council of Churches created the Commission on Climate Justice and Sustainable Development (CCJSD) to address the climate crisis and promote efforts to achieve the UN’s sustainable development goals. The WCC is an ecumenical fellowship of 352 churches from more than 120 countries, representing over 580 million Christians worldwide. WCC members include most of the world’s Orthodox churches, scores of Anglican, Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist and Reformed churches, and many United and Independent churches.

The Commission serves as a platform for faith-rooted and evidence-based actions responding to the impacts and roots of the intertwined ecological and economic emergencies. The commission mobilizes member churches to take urgent, effective, and holistic actions to respond to the climate emergency and broader economic and ecological crises in collaboration with other like-minded actors. The commission calls attention to gaps and challenges in addressing issues of ecological and economic injustice — and proposes concerted, effective, and timely action by member churches and ecumenical partners in their communities, countries, and
internationally.

The Commission operates through several working groups: Climate Justice; Economy of Life; Creation and Biodiversity Justice; Land, Water and Food Justice; and Ecumenical Diakonia and the Sustainable Development Goals. Each working group has commenced its work and is guided by an annual action plan. The Land, Water, and Food Justice working group, e.g., will be convening a global consultation on 29 May in Geneva to address critical interlinkages between land, water, and food security through a rights-based approach. To register, click https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZcvdu2spjwoHtdyAQPdMuV6lco5hBNoBClm#/registration. For more information, visit https://oikoumene.org/events/wcc-consultation-on-interconnected-challenges-of-land-water-and-food