Polluters must pay for the climate crisis
Call for an agreement at COP29 to provide countries on the frontline of the climate crisis with the money they need to tackle it.
Big polluters are profiting from the climate crisis while poor countries are left without the money to cope with its consequences.
We believe in tackling the causes of poverty. Campaign with CAFOD on issues such as the global food system, the climate emergency, cancelling debt and human rights.
Join our latest campaigns and find new ways to put your faith into action.
Call for an agreement at COP29 to provide countries on the frontline of the climate crisis with the money they need to tackle it.
Over 3 billion people are living in countries where governments spend more money on debts than on health or education. We need to take a stand.
The global food system is broken. It doesn’t work for those who work the hardest – small farmers – and it’s a major driver of the climate emergency.
Email David Lammy to call for peace and urge the UK to play its part in upholding international law.
We're urging the government to introduce a new law that will hold UK companies to account when their activities lead to human rights and environmental abuses.
Join us as we look ahead to the Jubilee Year 2025, hear live from one of our policy experts at COP29 in Azerbaijan, speak to a debt campaigner from Sri Lanka, and meet a new MP.
The current food system is not sustainable. But you wouldn’t think so if you listened to the multinationals that hold the most influence.
Pope Francis has urged world leaders not to allow new financial support for countries affected by the climate crisis to worsen the debt crisis low-income countries face.
Campaigners dressed as mock charity fundraisers have visited Shell and BP's London offices to call for polluters to contribute to paying for the climate crisis.
Fossil fuel companies should be taxed more to provide funds for countries on the frontline of the climate crisis, bishops have told ministers.
CAFOD and our partner BIBA-Kenya recently conducted research into how Kenya’s 2012 seed law has impacted women, who constitute up to 80% of the country’s agricultural labour force.
We are deeply saddened by the news that anti-mining activist Juan Lopez was shot dead in Honduras as he travelled home in his car from church.
Eight decades since its inception, has the World Bank learnt from past mistakes and evolved to deliver on its mission, or simply become stuck in its ways?
The new UK government must act to tackle the interconnected crises making global poverty worse.
July 2024 marked the 80th birthday of the World Bank. With a delegation of CAFOD supporters who also turned 80 this year, we visited its London headquarters to deliver a birthday message.
Conversations with election candidates are a great way to explain why it's crucial that politicians act to tackle global poverty.