Tuesday, February 3, 2026

MLP February Newsletter!

WCC Feature: WCC joins water justice movements demanding human rights focus at UN conference

Water justice movements, including faith-based networks and civil society groups, are holding the United Nations accountable as the world prepares for only the third UN Water Conference in 50 years. 
Dinesh Suna, among the rapporteurs and facilitators of Stakeholder Consultation, presenting reports of their Interactive Dialogue sessions Photo: People's Water Forum
29 January 2026

At the High-Level Preparatory Meeting in Dakar, Senegal, on 25-27 January, the People's Water Forum – which includes the World Council of Churches (WCC) Ecumenical Water Network – issued a statement challenging corporate influence in global water governance and reiterating nine demands from the Water Justice Manifesto signed by more than 500 organizations.

The 2026 UN Water Conference takes place 2-4 December in the United Arab Emirates, co-hosted by Senegal and the UAE. After the first UN water conference in 1977 in Mar del Plata, Argentina, the UN took a 45-year hiatus before organizing the second conference in New York in 2023. Corporate sectors filled that void, dominating water policy through forums like the World Water Forum. Grassroots movements found these forums largely out of reach, with registration fees at 1,000 euros and side events costing 2.500 euros.

Dinesh Suna, WCC programme executive for Land, Water, and Food and coordinator of the Ecumenical Water Network, co-facilitated Interactive Dialogue 3 on "Water for Planet" at Dakar. There were six interactive dialogues. He presented a stakeholder “think piece” urging shifts in water governance, ecosystem protection and climate resilience. Freshwater ecosystems are water-giving systems, the think piece stated, and outlined recommendations including integrating water policies across climate, biodiversity, and land management.

 

 

WF members  and allies with UN Special Rapporteur after issuing a press statement at UN Water conference, Dakar  Photo: People's Water Forum

People's Water Forum members organized a press conference with civil society representatives and UN special rapporteur Prof. Pedro Arrojo-Agudo. Their statement challenged the conference architecture: "The Conference architecture entrenches multi-stakeholder governance as the dominant mode of engagement, placing corporations and financial actors on equal footing with states and communities whose lives and livelihoods depend on water."

The statement also addressed debt justice, which it called inseparable from water justice. The Africa Water Justice Network argues that debt servicing undermines government capacity for public spending on water, sanitation, and health. The statement challenged the silence on water deprivation as a tool of human rights violations in Palestine, Sudan, and the Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria. "The UN Water Conference's claims of addressing pressing global water issues have no credibility without explicit recognition of these grave injustices," it stated.

The People's Water Forum called for a formal intergovernmental mechanism that ensures the primacy of human rights, creates binding commitments for universal water access by 2030, cancels unsustainable debt, and rejects market-based governance models that deepen global inequities.

In the months ahead, water justice movements will push to ensure that marginalized communities and faith-based organizations remain central to global water policy discussions.

People's Water Forum statement

Water Justice Manifesto

UN Water Conference 2026 

See more
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
SoundCloud
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. 

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

EarthBeat Weekly: Where New York's new archbishop stands on climate, creation care

Where New York's new archbishop stands on climate and creation care


EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

January 30, 2026


 


Joliet Bishop Ronald Hicks meets with members of the diocese's Laudato Si' Committee after a 2023 Mass at St. Francis of Assisi Church, in Bolingbrook, Illinois, kicking off the diocesan Laudato Si' action plan. (Julian Brown)


By this time next week, New York City will have a new archbishop.

Bishop Ronald Hicks of Joliet, Illinois, is set to be installed as the 14th archbishop of the New York Archdiocese Feb. 6 inside St. Patrick's Cathedral.

Much has been reported already on Hicks and his background, as he will become the leader of perhaps the nation's most prominent archdiocese and will succeed Cardinal Timothy Dolan who in his 17 years in the Big Apple has attracted passionate critics and supporters alike. 

Today at EarthBeat, I reported on Hicks' background around creation care and what kind of archdiocese he'll be entering when it comes to acting on Pope Francis' 2015 encyclical "Laudato Si', on Care for Our Common Home."

Under Hicks, the Joliet Diocese in 2023 enrolled in the Laudato Si' Action Platform, the Vatican initiative offering Catholic institutions a roadmap for implementing the encyclical's teachings. Hicks also participated an ecclesial meeting last year on ingraining Laudato Si' more widely in the U.S. church. So far, 30-plus U.S. dioceses have enrolled in the Vatican platform.

"We are each called to protect our common home according to our ability and means," Hicks wrote in an introductory letter to Joliet's Laudato Si' plan. He invited all Catholics "in a new dialogue on Care for Creation for future generations in our diocese, so that they too can enjoy the natural beauty and splendor of our local prairies, wetlands, and woodlands; our great Lake Michigan and mighty Mississippi River; and our cities, suburbs, and farming communities."

In New York, Hicks will find church engagement around creation care primarily on two fronts: grassroots parish efforts and the archdiocesan energy department.

The New York Metro Catholic Climate Covenant, which began in 2014 shortly after the global People's Climate March, has activated Catholics in parishes and at the grassroots, organizing creation liturgies, creating ecological resources and mobilizing advocacy efforts at the state capital. It has worked in tandem with an informal care for God's creation committee that reports to the archdiocese. 

The New York Archdiocese has been particularly active in energy upgrades, led by an energy department that is a rarity in U.S. dioceses. It has conducted energy audits at more than 300 buildings, facilitated 13 solar installations (primarily at schools) with four more in process, and is on track to exceed its goal of reducing its total energy costs by 10%, or approximately $40 million annually.

"I think Archbishop-designate Hicks is going to come in, from an energy standpoint, to a well-oiled machine, which we weren't 10 years ago when we started," Martin Susz, the archdiocese's director of energy management, told me.

Still, he and others sense much more can be done in New York, which is detailed in the story. 

Read more: NY Catholics hope new archbishop Hicks will continue Laudato Si' efforts



 


What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Gina Christian, OSV News

The message of the clock "cannot be clearer," said Alexandra Bell, president and CEO of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, which was founded in 1945 by Albert Einstein, J. Robert Oppenheimer and University of Chicago scientists who developed the first atomic weapons.

Read more here »


 

by Doreen Ajiambo

As religious sisters and others respond on the front lines, communities across Africa bear the cost of global delays on climate action.

Read more here »


 

by Russell Fiorella

"If information alone cannot cultivate eco-citizenship, then teachers must rethink their approach," writes Russell Fiorella.

Read more here »


 

by Junno Arocho Esteves, OSV News

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, concluded a two-day visit in Denmark with a meeting with the country's king and foreign minister as tensions between Europe and the United States still loom.

Read more here »


 

by Katarzyna Szalajko, OSV News

Russia's latest missile strikes on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities were aimed deliberately at civilians and civilian infrastructure and bear clear signs of crimes against humanity, Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk said, as Ukraine enters another week of winter fighting.

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


Yes, climate change can supercharge a winter storm. Here's how. —Matt Simon for Grist

Trump's biggest climate rollback stalls over fears it will lose in court —Jake Spring for the Washington Post

EPA plan would begin rolling back 'good neighbor' rule on downwind pollution from smokestacks —Matthew Daly for the Associated Press

Fourth wind farm blocked by Trump is allowed to resume construction —Rachel Frazin for The Hill

Trump's grant terminations upheld by Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals —Lisa Sorg for Inside Climate News

Despite Trump, renewable energy keeps surging —Barbara Grady for Yale Climate Connections

One of the worst parts of owning an EV is quickly getting better —Shannon Osaka for the Washington Post

Dutch government is ordered to protect residents on Caribbean island of Bonaire from climate change —Mike Corder for the Associated Press


Final Beat:


All corners of the country have turned attention toward Minneapolis in the past week, after the second U.S. citizen protesting the Trump administration's immigration crackdown was shot and killed by a federal agent on Jan. 24.

Along with numerous bishops, U.S. Catholic environmental groups have spoken out against the violence and the administration's increasingly aggressive deportation campaign. 

The Minnesota chapter of the Laudato Si' Movement said in a sign-on letter that "we uphold the dignity of all of God's creation, very much including that of every human being, created in the image and likeness of God. We oppose this unjust treatment of our communities and the indiscriminate mass deportation of people." They called on Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to fully withdraw from the state, and for Catholic leaders to stand firmly with immigrants.

In its own statement, the Catholic Climate Movement said that although immigration is not its central focus, "the defense of human dignity is inseparable from our work. The fate of migrants, the lives lost to state violence, and the health of our planet are bound together by a single moral truth: every person matters. All is connected."

You can follow all of NCR's coverage of the social unrest in the Twin Cities here.

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.


 


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

 


 


 
Advertisement

MLP February Newsletter!

  IN THIS ISSUE * Notes from the Staff * Welcome to our newest MLP Ministry! * Upcoming Events   From our Director of Engagement The last fe...