MENU

Social Channels

SEARCH ARCHIVE

  • Type

  • Topic

  • Sort

Looking down over Piazza San Pietro in Vatican City
Banauke/Shutterstock
INTERNATIONAL POLICY
18 June 201515:00

The story of the papal encyclical, as told by the media

Sophie Yeo

06.18.15

Sophie Yeo

18.06.2015 | 3:00pm
International policy The story of the papal encyclical, as told by the media

After months of speculation and expectation, the Pope has released an encyclical about climate change and our species’ relationship with its natural environment.

Anencyclicalis the highest form of communication that the Pope can issue. Today’swide-ranging missivecovers everything from batteries to deforestation, and from carbon credits to ecological debt.

This week, the 184-page document has dominated climate-related media coverage. Carbon Brief looks at how the Vatican’s input into the global climate conversation was received.

Media frenzy

Media reaction intensified in the moments after the Vatican dropped the encyclical into the public domain at midday today in Rome. However, journalists’ prepping had no doubt been aided by the leaked Italian version, which emerged in Italian magazineL’Espressoon Monday.

The Washington Postrounded up reaction, ranging from “over-the-top enthusiasm” to “harsh dismissal”, from figures such as German environment minister Barbara Hendricks andsnowball-throwingclimate sceptic US senator Jim Inhofe.

The英国广播公司集中在教皇通谕的呼吁“fossil fuels”.The Guardianlooked at its concern for the poor.The Daily Mailincluded comments from those opposed to the pro-renewables stance of the encyclical.

There was a discernible effort to fit the Pope’s message around unique, if niche, interests.

“‘Dear Texas,’ Pope Francis might as well have called his encyclical,” said Texan paperSan Antonio Express News.The Washington Timesbelieved that the Pope had “blasted the Obama administration”, despite there being no mention of Obama, or any other politician, by name in the text. “He is too polite to mention readers of The Guardian but we know what he means,” saidThe Telegraph.

Business-focused publications looked at the effect the encyclical could have on the corporate world.Business Greensaid that the encyclical amounts to a “clarion call to businesses and society to step up efforts to tackle climate change”. Its message will be “considered pretty seriously by at least 1.2bn consumers – the world’s Catholic population”, saidGreenBiz.Reutersfocused on the Pope’s dislike of carbon credits.

The Guardian,The TelegraphandRTCCdeemed the launch worthy of a live blog, where they captured the action and reaction as it unfolded.

Former BP chief Lord Browne tipped his hat to the Pope inGay Star News. He said: “I am sure that many Gay Star News readers disagree with the Pope on matters to do with sexuality. But I must confess that his call to action on climate change is right.”

Others focused on the politics of the document.The Conversationsaid its significance lies in how it “explicitly advocates that people turn to the political process when it comes to important decisions about the future of the planet”.

Its influence in the political sphere was played out even ahead of the launch today. Comments by Catholic presidential hopeful Jeb Bush, who said that he does not “get economic policy from my bishops or my cardinals or my pope”, were widely reported ahead of the launch, including byPolitico,The New York Times, andThe Guardian.TIMEsaid Bush’s views were “hogwash”.

In Australia, theSydney Morning Herald说,教皇通谕不可能逃脱the attention of domestic politicians: both prime minister Tony Abbott and opposition leader Bill Shorten are Catholics.

Pope -espresso -front -page

The front page of l’Espresso. Credit:l’Espresso.

Leak

Encyclical fever set in before the Vatican had formally released the document.

L’Espresso, which published the leaked draft on Monday, described the arduous process involved in moulding the document into its final shape, including the secret pulping of an earlier copy because of the changes made.

The leak precipitated a sudden scramble to translate the document from Italian into English by journalists hungry to get their first peek at its contents, and enabled a pre-launch round of commentary.

The Washington Postsaid the draft “reveals Francis as part policy wonk, part lyricist”. InThe New York Times, Andy Revkin warned of the limitations of the encyclical in changing the climate debate, since “Francis remains a man, not a Superman”.

An article in the academic journal亚慱彩票APPpointed out that the Pope, who studied chemistry, has “opted to incorporate specifics on science and action”.

Peter Stanford atThe Telegraphsaid that the encyclical does not offer much in the way of novelty, but “it is Pope Francis who is surely the new and unpredictable factor”, arguing that it is the popularity of Francis personally that could make the document reverberate across the developed and developing worlds.

Martin Sandbu inThe Financial Timesquestioned the logic of the Pope’s critical attitude towards technology, while George Monbiot inThe Guardiansaid that the encyclical will reinforce the point that there are spiritual as well as financial reasons to protect the planet.ThinkProgressexplored the debate over whether man has a God-given duty to extract fossil fuels.

In the US,Foxstaged a debate entitled, “Did the Pope go too far on global warming?”.

Intrigue at the Vatican

Meanwhile, the decision to leak the document became a story in its own right.

The Telegraphwas among the many papers reporting the Vatican’s condemnation of the leak as a “heinous act” and an “act of sabotage”.

The Guardianreported on the Vatican’s withdrawal of press accreditation to the journalist, Sandro Magister, who revealed the draft, and the ensuing debate among the media about whether to publish details of the leak.

Magister toldAssociated Pressthat it was his editor’s decision to publish the document. AP described a “whodunit” hunt inside the Vatican for the culprit responsible for the actual leak.

There was a flurry of suggestions that the leak was indicative of tensions within the Vatican, and hostility from some quarters towards Pope Francis’ agenda of reform.

The New York Timesprinted a series of experts’ views, taken from newspapers and blogs, on why Vatican insiders may want to undermine the Pope. It said it is “no coincidence” that the draft encyclical ended up with Magister, who is a strident critic of the largely popular figure. It added that the leak could have been intended to weaken the impact of the encyclical.

Italian dailyLa Stampapointed out that the historic document had achieved another landmark, in managing to be the first encyclical to be attacked even before it was released.

Main image: Looking down over Piazza San Pietro in Vatican City.
Sharelines from this story
  • The story of the papal encyclical, as told by the media

Expert analysis direct to your inbox.

Get a round-up of all the important articles and papers selected by Carbon Brief by email. Find out more about our newslettershere.