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Science and Religion in the Climate Change Debate:
Case study of the Bahá'í Community
Arthur Lyon Dahl, Ph.D.
President, International Environment Forum
Coordinator, UNEP/University of Geneva/Graduate Institute Environmental
Diplomacy Programme
Geneva, Switzerland
Paper presented at the conference on
Ethics and Climate Change: Scenarios for Justice and Sustainability
Padova, Italy, 23-25 October 2008

Science and religion are too often seen as antagonistic, with little to
contribute to each other. As the debate over climate change has
intensified, and the scientific evidence has become overwhelming, it is
apparent that scientific information alone may be insufficient to
motivate the necessary action for the fundamental transformation of
human society. Religions and faith-based groups are increasingly
raising the ethical issues behind the climate change challenge, in
complement to the scientific arguments. One example of this is the
Bahá'í community.
Scientific concepts of ecology, environmental responsibility and
evolutionary social change are deeply rooted in the Bahaî
writings, and the Bahá'í International Community
has been active on environmental issues at the United Nations and
elsewhere for many decades. Recent examples of this are a side event at
CSD-15 on the Ethical Dimensions of Climate Change, and an essay on
this topic in The Bahá'í World 2005-2006, the
public record of the Bahá'í community's
activities.
In parallel, the International Environment Forum, a Baha'i-inspired
organization of environmental professionals, has organized
international conferences on the spiritual dimensions of, and response
to, climate change, as well as on education for sustainable development
and lifestyle changes.
The approach taken combines a scientific perspective on climate change
with the resulting ethical challenges. It questions the dominant
materialist society and consumer culture, emphasizing the necessary
balance of the material and spiritual dimensions of human life. At the
social level, it focuses on the unity of the human race founded on
justice and solidarity. It explores the spiritual principles upon which
any solution to the climate change problem and the larger challenges
facing society must be based, and incites individual reflection and
community action. Scenarios of the ever-advancing civilization that can
result from a principle-based approach provide a positive focus to
counterbalance the negative perspectives for our immediate future that
the scientific facts demonstrate only too clearly.
A similar approach has proven effective in bringing ethics and religion
into training mid-career diplomats in the Geneva environmental
diplomacy programme. Participants have been able to integrate their
religious and ethical beliefs with their international action.

INTRODUCTION
While those of us in the environmental community have been raising
concerns for decades about climate change due to anthropogenic
emissions of greenhouse gases, we never imagined that it would occur at
the rates now being measured, especially in the polar regions. The
alarming evidence from the scientific community (IPCC 2007) combined
with serious estimates of the economic cost of failure to act (Stern
2006) have now brought debate on the issue to the highest political
levels. However it is apparent that scientific information, by itself,
is inadequate to motivate action. Faced with the inertia of economic,
political and social systems, and powerful vested interests determined
to maintain business as usual, the response to climate change is
inadequate relative to what scientists say is necessary. Economic and
political thinking are inherently short-term, producing what Sir
Nicholas Stern called the greatest market failure in history (Stern
2006).
Unlike other global environmental problems like stratospheric ozone
depletion, where the number of actors was limited and international
agreement on control measures was possible, climate change threatens
the very basis of the global economic system founded on the energy
subsidy from cheap fossil fuels. This makes action very difficult, as
it requires a fundamental transformation of human society. In addition,
there are not just a few responsible parties. Everyone is to some
extent responsible for greenhouse gas emissions, with responsibility
increasing with wealth and the rate of consumption. Everyone also risks
being a victim of climate change, with the poor the most immediately
vulnerable. This raises a fundamental ethical dilemma that touches
everyone.
Faced with the limitations of science to motivate change, it is natural
to consider what the other great knowledge system, religion (defined in
its largest sense), can contribute to the response to climate change.
Science and religion are too often seen as antagonistic, with little to
contribute to each other. Yet religion has traditionally been a major
source of motivation and ethical guidance. As the debate over climate
change has intensified, and the scientific evidence has become
overwhelming while action has not followed, it is apparent that a
broader approach is necessary. Religions and faith-based groups are
increasingly raising the ethical issues behind the climate change
challenge, in complement to the scientific arguments. This paper
describes one example of this in the Bahá'í
community, the most recent of the world religions founded in the
mid-nineteenth century.
BAHA'I APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGE
Scientific concepts of ecology, environmental responsibility and
evolutionary social change are deeply rooted in the
Bahá'í writings (BWC 1990), and the
Bahá'í International Community has been active on
environmental issues at the United Nations and elsewhere for several
decades (Dahl 2005). For Bahá'ís, science and
religion are fundamentally in harmony, providing complementary
perspectives on the same fundamental truth. Just as religion without
science and reason can fall into superstition, so does science without
religion tend towards materialism.
The Bahá'í approach combines a scientific
perspective on climate change with the resulting ethical challenges. It
questions the dominant materialist society and consumer culture,
emphasizing the necessary balance of the material and spiritual
dimensions of human life (UHJ 2005). By teaching contentment with
little, and the need to eliminate extremes of wealth and poverty that
are often associated with excessive greenhouse gas emissions (the
former through overconsumption, the latter through deforestation and
soil degradation), it encourages a reconsideration of lifestyles and
consumption patterns. "Take from this world only to the measure of your
needs, and forego that which exceedeth them. Observe equity in all your
judgements, and transgress not the bounds of justice, nor be of them
that stray from its path." (Bahá'u'lláh 2002)
At the social level, the Bahá'í approach focuses
on the unity of the human race founded on justice and solidarity (BIC
1995). It explores the spiritual principles upon which any solution to
the climate change problem and the larger challenges facing society
must be based, and incites individual reflection and community action.
For a complex issue such as climate change, where costs and benefits,
immediate advantages and long-term risks are so unequally distributed,
justice and equity will be essential to achieve any global agreement on
action. As the Bahá'í International Community has
put it in the larger context of development: "Concern for justice
protects the task of defining progress from the temptation to sacrifice
the well-being of the generality of humankind -- and even of the planet
itself -- to the advantages which technological breakthroughs can make
available to privileged minorities.... Above all, only development
programmes that are perceived as meeting their needs and as being just
and equitable in objective can hope to engage the commitment of the
masses of humanity, upon whom implementation depends. The relevant
human qualities such as honesty, a willingness to work, and a spirit of
co-operation are successfully harnessed to the accomplishment of
enormously demanding collective goals when every member of society --
indeed every component group within society -- can trust that they are
protected by standards and assured of benefits that apply equally to
all." (BIC 1995) The present difficulty in agreeing to global standards
for greenhouse gas reductions arises in part because governments are
still more concerned about defending their short-term interests rather
than justly and equitably distributing both the efforts required and
the accruing benefits.
Bahá'ís have a strong vision of a future global
society, and see climate change as an important force compelling the
nations and peoples of the world to give priority to their common
interest. The Bahá'í writings include scenarios
of the ever-advancing civilization that can result from a
principle-based approach to world challenges like climate change, with
a federated world government able to maintain collective security, to
manage the planet's vast resources and to distribute its products
equitably (Shoghi Effendi, 1938). Such perspectives of the long-term
future of the human race provide a positive focus to counterbalance the
negative concerns for our immediate future that the scientific facts of
climate change demonstrate only too clearly.
Given this background, it is normal that the
Bahá'í International Community (BIC) should
engage in the climate change debate. At the 15th UN Commission on
Sustainable Development in New York in 2007, the BIC organized a
popular side event in the UN building on the Ethical Dimensions of
Climate Change, in partnership with the Missions of the Marshall
Islands and Tuvalu, the UN, the Rock Ethics Institute at Penn State
University, the International Environment Forum, and other NGOs. An
essay on this topic was published in The Bahá'í
World 2005-2006, the public record of the Bahá'í
community's activities (Dahl 2007).
National Bahá'í communities have also
participated in inter-faith events on environment, including climate
change, and have encouraged their local communities to consider the
need to mitigate climate change in planning their activities.
INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENT FORUM
In 1997, a number of Bahá'ís and other
like-minded environmental professionals organized the International
Environment Forum (IEF), a Baha'i-inspired professional organization
for addressing the environment and sustainable development
(http://www.bcca.org/ief). Now with over 200 members in more than 50
countries, the IEF has provided a platform for its members to explore
the relationship between ethical and spiritual principles and the
environmental challenges facing the world. The IEF functions as a
virtual organization, using the Internet and the world wide web to
network among its widespread membership. It also organizes annual
conferences on themes relevant to the environment and sustainability,
and has been active in the UN Decade of Education for Sustainable
Development. In 2002, it was accredited to the UN World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, where it
participated in the Science Forum and organized several parallel
activities. It is a partner in various educational activities such as a
Certificate of Advanced Studies in Sustainable Development at the
University of Geneva, and contributes to the European Union's Consumer
Citizenship Network (http://www.hihm.no/concit/).
As an organization bridging science and spirituality, the IEF has been
a forum where climate change has been considered from an ethical
perspective, and it has supported the efforts of the
Bahá'í International Community and various
national Bahá'í communities to make contributions
to the debate on climate change at the United Nations and elsewhere.
In 2006, the IEF organized an international conference at Oxford
University on "Science, Faith and Global Warming: Arising to the
Challenge" in partnership with the Bahá'í Agency
for Social and Economic Development of the United Kingdom
(http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf10.htm). The conference considered climate
change from economic, social, gender, development and
community perspectives. Speakers included Dr. Halldor Thorgeirsson,
Deputy Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change, Dr. Augusto Lopez-Claros, then Chief Economist at the World
Economic Forum, and various scientists and academics.
The IEF annual conference in 2007 was held in Ottawa, Canada, in
collaboration with the Bahá'í Community of
Canada, on the theme "Responding to Climate Change: Scientific
Realities, Spiritual Imperatives" (http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf11.htm).
The location was chosen because Arctic communities are some of the
first to be severely impacted by climate change, and an ethical and
spiritual approach can help them to cope with the forced transformation
of their environment and lifestyle. The opening speaker, Professor John
Stone, a Vice-Chair of one of the main committees of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, had learned the morning of
his talk that they had won the Nobel Peace Prize for their work.
Other IEF conferences have considered topics relevant to climate change
such as education for sustainable development and lifestyle changes
that would help to reduce carbon footprints. For its 2008 conference in
the Netherlands in partnership with the European
Bahá'í Business Forum (http://www.ebbf.org), it
considered "Growth or Sustainability? Defining, Measuring and Achieving
Prosperity" (http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf12.htm), with climate change
as one of the major drivers for a new look at the purpose and functions
of business incorporating a values-based approach.
ENVIRONMENTAL DIPLOMACY PROGRAMME
A similar approach has proven effective in bringing ethics and religion
into training mid-career diplomats on climate change and other
environmental issues. The challenges of extending international
environmental law and applying existing law are so complex that few
governments have the capacity to address them coherently. For example,
negotiating an international agreement on climate change action beyond
the Kyoto Protocol requires diplomats who understand both the
underlying science and the multiple situations in which different
countries find themselves when faced with accelerating global change,
as well as the politics and economics of climate change.
The UNEP/University of Geneva/Graduate Institute Environmental
Diplomacy Programme
(http://www.unige.ch/formcont/environmentaldiplomacy/) combines a broad
coverage of emerging environmental issues requiring international
action with the practical tools and negotiating skills necessary to
achieve international consensus. One component of this training is a
module on Ethics, Religion and Science for Environmental Diplomacy. It
reviews the ethical principles underlying international agreements, and
explores the ways the religious or secular positions of governments
affect their negotiating positions. It also shows the important
contribution that principles relevant to the environment in all the
major religions can make to the search for equitable agreements that
can be implemented. Examples from the Christian, Islamic and
Bahá'í traditions have been studied in detail. By
extending the environmental issues requiring international agreement to
the most fundamental level of ethical principle, the course helps to
lay a foundation for greater international understanding in the future.
It has enabled participants to integrate their religious and ethical
beliefs and those of their nations and cultures with their
international action. They often cite the ethical dimension as one of
the strong points of the course.
The success of this approach underlines the need to include the ethical
and spiritual dimension in a broad and inclusive form more widely in
educational programmes of all kinds and levels to equip citizens for
the challenges of the years ahead.
CONCLUSIONS
The need to mobilize the world population to respond to the challenges
of climate change requires new kinds of partnerships across all
segments of society. In particular, the scientific community which has
been marshalling the evidence for climate change and trying to
understand and project its impacts, should recognize that faith-based
organizations have a unique reach to grass-roots levels all around the
world, and a capacity to motivate change, that can be used to
communicate the ethical challenges arising from climate change and the
need for a common effort to respond. The necessary transition will
require sacrifices from many people, which will be more readily
accepted with an ethical justification and spiritual motivation.
The Bahá'í community provides one model showing
how science and religion can be brought together to raise public
awareness of climate change and motivate action towards sustainability
based on justice and equity.
REFERENCES CITED
Bahá'í International Community (1995). The
Prosperity of Humankind. London, Bahá'í
Publishing Trust.
Bahá'í World Centre (1990). Conservation of the
Earth's Resources. A compilation of extracts from the
Bahá'í Writings prepared by the Research
Department of the Universal House of Justice. London,
Bahá'í Publishing Trust.
Bahá'u'lláh (2002). The Summons of the Lord of
Hosts, p. 193. Haifa, Bahá'í World Centre.
Dahl, Arthur (2005). "Bahá'í Faith and the United
Nations", pp. 153-154. In Bron R. Taylor (ed,), The Encyclopedia of
Religion and Nature, vol. 1. London, Thoemmes Continuum.
Dahl, Arthur Lyon. (2007). "Climate Change and its Ethical Challenges", pp.
157-172. In The Baha'i World 2005-2006: An International Record. Haifa:
Baha'i World Centre.
IPPC (2007). Climate Change 2007: Synthesis Report. Contribution of
Working Groups I, II, and III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Geneva, IPCC.
http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/ar4-syr.htm
Shoghi Effendi (1938). The World Order of
Bahá'u'lláh. Wilmette, Illinois,
Bahá'í Publishing Trust.
Stern, Nicholas (2006). The Economics of Climate Change, London, Her
Majesty's Treasury.
http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/independent_reviews/stern_review_economics_climate_change/stern_review_report.cfm
Universal House of Justice (2005). One Common Faith. Wilmette,
Illinois, Bahá'í Publishing Trust.

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Last updated 6 December 2008