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Pope Moves Towards A Greener Vatican

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  • Pope Moves Towards A Greener Vatican

    POPE MOVES TOWARDS A GREENER VATICAN

    Times Online
    November 26, 2008
    UK

    Vatican initiative to promote the protection of the environment begins
    with solar panel installationRichard Owen in Rome In a move toward a
    "greener Vatican" Pope Benedict XVI today (Wednesday) held his first
    audience in a hall heated and lit by newly installed solar panels on
    the roof.

    L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, described the event as
    the "first ecological audience" in the Paul VI audience hall, designed
    in 1971 by the architect Pier Luigi Nervi. As the Pope addressed the
    9000 faithful, 2,400 solar panels on the roof above his head converted
    sunlight into electricity to light and heat the hall.

    As if on cue, the skies above Rome turned clear and sunny after days
    of cloud and rain. The Vatican said the solar panel project was one
    of several "concrete and tangible initiatives" to promote protection
    of the environment, and part of the "green culture characterised by
    ethical values" promoted by Pope Benedict.

    An inauguration ceremony was held the Pontifical Academy of Sciences,
    attended by Cardinal Giovanni Lajolo, the Governor of Vatican City,
    Frank Asbeck, president of Solar World AG, the Germany company which
    donated the panels, and Carlo Rubbia, winner of the Nobel Prize
    for Physics.

    The Vatican, one of the world's smallest states, covering 108 acres,
    aims to become the world's "first carbon-neutral state", and is
    growing a 37 acre forest in Hungary to offset its annual carbon
    dioxide emissions. It has undertaken to use renewable energy for 20
    percent of its needs by 2020.

    The panels on the undulating 5000 square metre roof of the audience
    hall will produce 300 kilowatt hours of "clean energy", supplying the
    energy needs of the hall itself and nearby Vatican buildings. Vatican
    officials said the panels would save the equivalent of 80 tonnes of
    oil each year.

    They cannot be seen from the ground and so will not affect the Vatican
    skyline, officials said.

    At the audience, at which the Pope was accompanied by Aram I,
    Catholicos of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Lebanon, the pontiff
    deplored "misunderstandings among Christians". He said the Armenian
    leader's "fraternal visit" was "an occasion to strengthen the bonds
    that exist and a further step in the journey toward full unity,
    which is the objective of all Christians and a gift of the Lord."

    Aram I also referred to "the bonds that connect the two apostolic
    Churches" and the "communion of traditions and values that make it
    possible to look to the journey toward full unity."

    In talks with Aram 1 Pope Benedict deplored the "unspeakable suffering"
    experienced by Armenians in the twentieth century, but did not use
    the word "genocide", even though it had previously been used by John
    Paul II.

    The Armenian authorities say up to 1.5 million Armenians died in
    orchestrated killings by Turks during the final years of the Ottoman
    Empire.

    Turkey says the killings occurred when Armenians revolted against
    the Ottoman Empire in collaboration with an invading Russian army.

    Aram I said "Churches, religions and states should recognise all
    genocides, including the Armenian genocide, and they should commit
    themselves to preventing all genocides." The Armenian Apostolic Church
    dates to the sixth century, when Armenian Christians broke with Rome
    over theological disputes arising from the Council of Chalcedon in
    451. A joint theological commission is currently examining remaining
    differences.

    Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for
    Promoting Christian Unity, told Vatican Radio that the Holy See regards
    the Armenian genocide as "a fact". "The Vatican's stance on this issue
    was stated at the time during a visit to Armenia by John Paul II"
    Cardinal Kasper said. "The Pope visited the genocide monument there
    and used the word 'genocide,' although this did not please Turkey."
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