Monthly Archives: April 2025

Mongabay: Pope Francis’ uncompromising defense of nature may be his greatest legacy

Pope Francis was very much a man of the people while traveling to 68 countries during his pontificate. At least once a week while in Rome, he would cruise around St. Peters Square to greet pilgrims and tourists who had come to visit Vatican City, like this encounter in June 2016. Photo by Justin Catanoso for Mongabay.

This story is one I was both sad and eager to write. Sad because of the death of Pope Francis at 88, one of the most extraordinary leaders of the global Catholic Church in generations; eager because Francis in a very tangible way brought me to Mongabay; I’ve been covering for the past decade his ceaseless crusade to implore people of all faiths to protect “God’s creation” and fight climate change we are all making worse.

In 2015, I had recently pivoted from local news reporting to international environmental reporting after a nudge and plenty of inspiration from my friend and colleague Miles Silman, a leading tropical ecologist at Wake Forest University, where we both teach. That summer, while I was teaching a summer session for Wake students in Rome, I was contacted by Jon Sawyer, founder and then CEO of the Pulitzer Center, with an offer to travel to Latin America — home ethnic home of Pope Francis — and evaluate whether people there (overwhelmingly Catholic) were apt to listen to and follow his teachings in Laudato Si, a Catholic teaching document of the highest order, and the first focused exclusively on climate change, environmental degradation and humankind’s heavy hand in destroying the planet. The encyclical made global headlines, inspired environmental activism and incited a growing number of enemies. It’s spirit is woven throughout the preamble of the historic Paris Agreement on climate change of 2015.

I said yes to Jon Sawyer’s offer and chose to report from all over Peru for three weeks. Enrique Ortiz, my friend and Peruvian biologist, agreed to be my fixer, and my oldest daughter Emilia came along for two of those weeks as my photographer. The stories I produced enabled me to make a real pitch to Mongabay founder and editor-in-chief Rhett Butler. He agreed to take my stores, assigned Glenn Scherer to be my editor, and Glenn and I have been working together ever since.

When the pope died on April 21, 2025, at the Vatican the day after Easter, Glenn and I spoke soon after. Given the many stories I’ve written on Francis and the intersection between faith and climate action over the years, Glenn urged me to put together a reflection on Francis’ environmental legacy. I agreed, leaning heavily on the pope’s own words and exhortations among three pioneering documents since 2015.

Except: This singular leadership will surely be a lasting part of his legacy, as his words continue spreading like soft ripples across the Earth he loved. “There is a mystical meaning to be found in a leaf, in a mountain trail, in a dewdrop, in a poor person’s face,” Francis wrote. “The world sings of an infinite Love: how can we fail to care for it?”

In 2015’s Laudato Si’, Pope Francis wrote about our responsibility to each other and to the planet, with much of his inspirational language later woven into the preamble of the historic 2015 Paris climate agreement. In 2023’s Laudate Deum, he urged world leaders to take decisive action on climate change, before the planet reaches “the point of no return.” Image by Justin Catanoso for Mongabay.

Mongabay: Wood pellet maker Drax denied pollution permit after small town Mississippi outcry

Krystal Martin (center) has for months lobbied local and state officials about what she and her neighbors believe are health hazards posed by pollution from one of the largest wood-pellet mills in the world, owned by Drax and located near the center of Gloster, Mississippi. She organized neighbors on April 8 to fill a hearing room in the capital of Jackson to argue against a permit for Drax to legally emit more toxic pollution during its manufacturing process. Image courtesy of Krystal Martin.

It is a rare thing when a small, poor Black community stands up successfully to a corporate giant like Drax, one of the world’s largest makers of wood pellets for industrial-scale burning for energy. But that’s what happened in Mississippi in April 2025, as this story of mine illustrates.

I learned about this meeting in Jackson, the capital of Mississippi, while I was in Washington in late March to speaks at a forum on wood pellets for energy sponsored by the Rachel Carson Council. Krystal Martin discussed the organizing efforts her group, in conjunction with several environmental groups, were pursuing to keep Drax from increasing the amount of toxic emissions it was already putting into the air over Gloster, Miss., where Drax has its largest facility. The community argument prevailed over the business argument put forth by Drax. That just doesn’t happen very often, especially in environmental justice communities like Gloster.

This is one of those examples where a public health and quality of life argument from a local community may just have more impact in pushing back against the growth of the wood pellet industry than the years of scientific arguments that have largely failed to persuade policymakers in the European Union and United Kingdom to shift away from their reliance of forest biomass for energy as the primary way to phase out coal.