Friday, June 5, 2026

Minute for Mission: National Gun Violence Remembrance Day

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Minute for Mission: National Gun Violence Remembra...: Image Artwork by: Blake Johnson Today is National Gun Violence Remembrance Day, and the month of June is set aside as Gun Violence Awareness...

WCC NEWS: Faith-based groups submit OECD complaint concerning HSBC financing linked to Cerrejón coal mine in Colombia

Churches and faith-based organizations from Colombia, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, together with investment and ecumenical partners, have submitted a complaint under the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises on Responsible Business Conduct concerning HSBC Holdings plc and its financial relationship with Glencore, the company operating the Cerrejón coal mine in La Guajira, Colombia.
Headquarters of the HSBC bank in Canary Wharf, London. Photo: Sean Hawkey/WCC
05 June 2026

The complaint to the UK National Contact Point was jointly submitted by Iglesia Metodista de Colombia (Methodist Church in Colombia), Methodist Church of Great Britain, Methodist Church in Ireland, Epworth Investment Management Ltd, and CEPALC (Ecumenical Centre for Communication in Latin America) on 5 June.

The complainants argue that financial institutions have a responsibility to ensure that financing and investment practices are aligned with human rights, environmental standards, and their own climate commitments.

The Cerrejón mining operation has for years faced concerns and criticism related to environmental degradation, impacts on water access, displacement of communities, and health impacts affecting local and Indigenous populations in La Guajira.

The complaint calls on the UK National Contact Point to examine whether HSBC’s financing relationship with Glencore is consistent with the OECD Guidelines and expectations regarding responsible business conduct and due diligence.

The submission is supported by the World Council of Churches (WCC) as part of its “Hope for Children through climate justice” initiative. Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay, WCC general secretary, said: “Faith communities have a moral responsibility to advocate for climate justice, human dignity, and responsible stewardship of creation. This initiative reflects growing concern among churches and communities worldwide regarding the role financial systems play in shaping the future of people and planet.”

The WCC emphasized that the initiative is not intended as a campaign regarding a single financial institution, but rather as part of a broader call for responsible finance and accountability in the context of the climate crisis.

“The issue goes beyond one company or one bank,” said Pillay. “Communities affected by extractive industries deserve to be heard, and financial institutions should align their financing practices with their own climate and human rights commitments.”

The OECD complaint mechanism provides a non-judicial international process through which organizations and communities can raise concerns regarding responsible business conduct by multinational enterprises and financial institutions.

The complainants expressed their willingness to engage constructively in dialogue through the OECD process and reiterated their call for greater transparency, meaningful due diligence, and a transition toward sustainable and ethical financing practices.

The organizations involved in the initiative are also encouraging wider discussion within faith communities, financial institutions, and public on the responsibility of global finance actors in addressing climate crisis and protecting vulnerable communities.

WCCs initiative Hope for Children through climate justice”

The WCC initiative Hope for Children through climate justice” equips churches to engage with legal and accountability mechanisms in cases where children’s rights are affected by the actions of financial institutions, especially through investments into fossil fuels expansion. 

Media resources

Background resources for media, including Q&A list, photo coverage, feature material and testimonies from affected communities in La Guajira, Colombia, are available upon request.

Andrew Harper: Why more faith investors are advocating for sustainable finance (WCC interview, 03 June 2026)

Learn more about the Churches’ Commitments to Children and Climate-Responsible Banking

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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Tell Congress: No Fossil Fuel Immunity

Fossil fuel companies are pushing for new legal protections that would make it harder for communities harmed by pollution and climate-fueled disasters to hold them accountable. GreenFaith's No Fossil Fuel Immunity petition is a clear message to policymakers: communities deserve justice, not special protections for polluters.

Will you sign and share the petition today?


At the same time, GreenFaith is building pressure beyond our borders. In just 10 days, Gulf South frontline advocates Misha Mayeur and James Hiatt will travel to Germany to share what LNG expansion is doing to communities across coastal Louisiana. They will bring firsthand stories of families living alongside refineries, pipelines, and export terminals into international conversations about energy policy, public health, and climate justice.

These efforts go hand in hand.

While Misha and James help ensure the voices of Gulf South communities are heard internationally, we must continue organizing here at home. The fossil fuel industry is working to expand its influence in Washington, and now is not the time to be silent.

Real change happens when people speak up everywhere—from community meetings and congressional offices to international forums and faith communities around the world.

Please add your name and help us build the public pressure needed to stop fossil fuel immunity.


In solidarity,

Rev. Amy Brooks Paradise
Organizing Coordinator, GreenFaith US

EarthBeat Weekly: Pope joins chorus of concerns with AI-fueled data center boom

Pope joins chorus of concerns with AI-fueled data center boom

 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

June 5, 2026


 

Spencer Snakard, president of Protect Fauquier, speaks Aug. 29, 2022, at a rally near Manassas, Va., protesting a newly built data center for Amazon Web Services. Virginia currently houses 609 data centers, the most in the United States. (AP/Matthew Barakat, file)

There is plenty to unpack from Pope Leo XIV's first encyclical, Magnifica Humanitas, a 200-plus page document on safeguarding the human person in the time of artificial intelligence. 

That's equally true on the environmental threats and potential posed by AI that the pope raised in the encyclical. Last week, I reported an overview of how the environment and technology intersected in the encyclical. Today, a new story at EarthBeat examines the issue of data centers specifically.

In many U.S. communities, concerned citizens have mobilized to express worry and outrage about the hypersonic expansion of data centers — largely driven by AI's rapid rise — in their towns and fields. A main focus has been the amount of energy and water required to power and cool data centers, which threaten to both deplete resources and raise utility bills.

In Magnifica Humanitas, Pope Leo spoke directly about data centers in a section where he warned the rapid and uncritical adoption of AI "exposes us to a range of risks, including the tendency to overlook the environmental impact."

"Current AI systems require enormous amounts of energy and water, significantly influencing carbon dioxide emissions, and place heavy demands on natural resources," he wrote in paragraph 101.

"As their complexity increases, especially in the case of large language models, the need for computing power and storage capacity grows too, which requires an extensive network of machines, cables, data centers and energy-intensive infrastructure," he said. "For this reason, it is essential to develop more sustainable technological solutions that reduce environmental impact and help protect our common home."

A typical AI data center uses the same amount of power as 100,000 houses, according to the International Energy Agency. Add to that significant water demands — to cool the around-the-clock graphics processing units training generative AI models — and the ecological impacts come into focus quickly. Those strains on resources have a cascading effect on residents' utility bills, driving up costs for all.

"We're not anti-development, but what we're seeing on the ground is not sustainable for the people or the places that we love and inhabit in the South," Amanda Garcia, a senior attorney who leads data center advocacy for the Southern Environmental Law Center, told me. 

Garcia called it "extremely important and encouraging" to hear a world leader like Pope Leo raise the threats and concerns of the AI-fueled data center boom, lending his voice to the many communities facing these developments in their backyards.

Read more: Pope's AI encyclical lends church support to calls to slow rapid expansion of data centers



What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Paul Jeffrey

"This is an important step toward justice for Juan, and we're hopeful that we're getting closer to the true masterminds who ordered and paid for this crime," Fr. Carlos Orellana said.

Read more here »


 

by Kate Scanlon, OSV News

Most U.S. adults who regularly attend religious services have heard their clergy speak about at least one political or social issue recently, according to a new Pew Research Center survey.

Read more here »


 

by Jacinta Chiwayu

In Malawi, families have been left without food after recent years of drought and cyclones. Responding with a traveling feeding program, Presentation Sisters have become more deeply aware of communities' struggles.

Read more here »


 

by Chris Herlinger

A new Italian documentary, "Agnus Dei," follows the Benedictine sisters who care for two lambs whose wool becomes part of a vestment for the pope and archbishops — a centuries-old tradition.

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


Think it's hot now? The next five years will smash records, UN says —Seth Borenstein for the Associated Press

A strong El Nino may be imminent. Climate change will make its effects worse —Kate Abnett for Reuters

Trump expected to announce $700M boost for coal —Rachel Frazin for The Hill

Democrats pledge to fight Trump's removal of ocean monitors —Lisa Friedman for The New York Times

House passes bipartisan measures to speed geothermal energy projects —Maria Gallucci for Canary Media

In a years-long fight, the Illinois environmental justice movement gets a win —Keerti Gopal for Inside Climate News

Supreme Court's limitation on wetlands protection will make flooding worse —Lisa Sorg for Inside Climate News

The surprising climate fix that Democrats and Republicans both love —Matt Simon for Grist


Final Beat:


The World Cup begins next week. 

For the month that follows, futbol's finest — or soccer if you prefer — are set to take the pitch in stadiums across Canada, Mexico and the United States (including down the road from NCR headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri).

Beyond the teams and fandom accompanying the quadrennial tournament, an environmental angle is at play at the World Cup, too. 

In May the Washington Post reported on a study projecting this World Cup could be among the hottest ever, exposing players and fans alike to dangerous levels of heat and humidity. This World Cup could also be the most polluting, climate scientists and advocates told the Los Angeles Times, in part due to air travel (by both teams and fans) across three countries, producing upwards of 9 million tons of carbon emissions — double the amount from recent World Cups. A major sponsor of the tournament is Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil and gas company.

Nevertheless, Catholic dioceses across the U.S. see the World Cup as both a pastoral opportunity and an unprecedented moment of global encounter, as John Knebels reported for OSV News this week.

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.


 


Brian Roewe
Environment Correspondent
National Catholic Reporter
broewe@ncronline.org

 


 


 
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Truth and Action Roundup 6.5.2026

Minute for Mission: National Gun Violence Remembrance Day

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Minute for Mission: National Gun Violence Remembra... : Image Artwork by: Blake Johnson Today is National Gun...