WASHINGTON, D.C. — People of the southwest Pacific Ocean nation of Papua New Guinea face dual threats from rising sea levels and the advent of undersea mining for valuable metals, the country’s first cardinal said during a visit to the nation’s capital.
Cardinal John Ribat, archbishop of Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, shared stories of his fellow Papuans who have been forced to move inland from ancestral lands along the ocean as rising seas have inundated their homes.
The same is true on hundreds of tiny islands throughout the Pacific basin, he told Catholic News Service March 14 before a visit to Capitol Hill to plead for action to protect the environment and address climate change.
Ocean levels have risen in recent decades, overtaking low lying areas on tiny island nations and large land masses alike. Scientists attribute higher seas to melting polar ice as greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels accumulate in the earth’s atmosphere, causing the planet to warm.
“We are responsible to voice this awareness, that this is something we can’t stop talking about. If nothing is happening to us in the way of help, our people will be faced with disaster,” Ribat said.
The Catholic Church must accompany people who face any type of difficulty, he said.
“We are close to the people and the people come to us. They talk to us about this, and we go and see what is happening. We are there and they see us doing something, going with them through this situation they are facing. They always find comfort through the Church being with them facing these challenges,” he added.
“It’s really the spiritual side that is making them feel more at ease, that they have the strength to face this,” he continued.
The 61-year-old cardinal expressed deep concern as well during the interview and a presentation March 13 at The Catholic University of America about the expected start in 2019 of undersea mining in the eastern Bismarck Sea between the Papua New Guinea’s New Ireland and New Britain islands.
Led by the Canadian firm Nautilus Minerals, exploration on the seafloor nearly a mile below the ocean surface since the 1980s has uncovered high concentrations of copper, gold, zinc and silver near hydrothermal vents. Mining is expected to bring a much-needed infusion of cash through royalties to the island nation.
However, Ribat said, fishermen are concerned that the fishing grounds that have been sustainably harvested for generations will be disturbed by the remote-controlled robots recovering the metals.
“We as Church have a grave concern. It will affect the livelihood of the people there,” he said.
There also is concern about pollution from the mining operation that could affect marine life.
The company’s website does not address the specific concerns raised by the cardinal and the fishermen. An email to the company did not receive a response.
Since being appointed the country’s first cardinal in 2016, Ribat has focused much of his ministry on addressing climate change. He has called the environment the most important issue for the Papuan Catholic Church to address because of the risks facing thousands of people in the country of 8 million.
“We’re accompanying people through this,” the cardinal said, calling climate change a family issue that connects the words of Pope Francis’s apostolic exhortation on the family, Amoris Laetitia, and his encyclical on the human relationship with the environment, Laudato Si’.
“The issue for us is the families are suffering,” Ribat said. “They are the ones that will be in more of a struggle.”
Rising seas are affecting islands through the western Pacific, and Ribat, who is president of the Federation of Catholic Episcopal Conferences of Oceania, said his fellow bishops agree that immediate action is needed to assist people who are being forced to relocate.
“Most of the islands are in danger,” he told an audience at The Catholic University of America March 13.
Drinking water also is at risk, he said. Some communities have seen their wells infiltrated by sea water, causing an increase in salinity, and some people have had to abandon traditional gardens, he said.
Ribat arrived in the U.S. to speak on the environmental impact of climate change at St. Ignatius Loyola Parish in New York City March 12. A member of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, he also received an award from the parish for his commitment to upholding the principles of Jesuit spirituality in his ministry.
He decided to add a stop on Capitol Hill, where, he said, he hoped that the stories of the climate challenges confronting average people will influence members of Congress to act to protect the environment.
The cardinal also expressed concern that U.S. President Donald Trump had committed to withdrawing the country from the Paris climate accord reached in 2015.
“Pulling out of this is not realizing what the struggle we are going through,” he explained. “I don’t think they are fully aware of the costs of this. The pulling out by the president is so difficult for us to understand. We are the victims of what is happening.”
Papua New Guinea is an overwhelmingly Christian nation. About 27 percent of residents are Catholic and 70 percent are Protestant. The remainder follow Baha’i, Islam or indigenous religions.
Ribat’s visit was coordinated by the Franciscan Action Network, Global Catholic Climate Movement, Catholic Climate Covenant, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Catholic University’s School of Theology and Religious Studies.