Next Step for UMC Net Zero Agencies: Divest from Fossil Fuels

By Sharon Delgado

Published in UM Creation Justice Movement’s February 2025 Newsletter

“Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” (Matthew 6:21).

In the above passage, Jesus tells us to value spiritual treasures above our material treasures. This passage also reminds us that how we use or invest our material treasures expresses our spiritual values, for “where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

These words are especially relevant in the context of a rapidly heating planet. We United Methodists have a heart for God’s creation and for climate justice. As I write, the Los Angeles fires are still burning, bringing an apocalyptic vision of how accelerating climate change exacerbates what used to be called “natural disasters,” bringing damaging and sometimes catastrophic harm to people, communities, and ecosystems around the world.

As a denomination we have long acknowledged the dangers of climate change and have called for a just transition away from fossil fuels toward a clean energy future. Yet many United Methodist individuals and institutions continue to invest in fossil fuels, the primary cause of climate change. Even as our treasure is still tangled up with fossil fuels, the United Methodist Church has witnessed to God’s call to care for creation. Throughout the denomination United Methodists have taken actions to “green” the church and advocate for climate justice. One important step was a denominational pledge to achieve net zero emissions by 2050.

1.5 to Stay Alive

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has repeatedly called on the global community to stabilize the climate by limiting greenhouse gas emissions to 1.5°C (2.7°F) above pre-industrial levels “to prevent the worst impacts of climate change and preserve a livable planet.” Climate activists around the world seized on this goal with passion and hope, popularizing the slogan “1.5 to Stay Alive.” The IPCC also described “pathways” to achieve this goal: “To keep global warming to no more than 1.5°C — as called for in the Paris Agreement — emissions need to be reduced by 45% by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050.”

In 2021, eleven United Methodist agencies came together to strengthen our denomination’s response to climate change by forming The United Methodist Interagency Just and Equitable Net Zero Coalition and joining the global effort to achieve net zero emissions by 2050. According to the Coalition’s statement: “We, the agencies of The United Methodist Church, pledge to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050 across ministries, facilities, operations, and investments and to leverage the gifts of our connection putting equity and justice at the center as we build a net-zero emission economy by 2050.”

Other agencies and the Council of Bishops have since joined in this commitment to attain net zero within their institutions by 2050. The delegates of the 2020/2024 General Conference of The United Methodist Church affirmed this commitment, which is now part of our United Methodist Book of Resolutions. Fossil Free UMC commends these efforts. In fact, we want to help! If any of these agencies are still invested in fossil fuel corporations, divesting from them would eliminate Scope 3 (indirect) fossil fuel emissions and help the agencies reach net zero. One way to do this is by contacting Wespath or your United Methodist faith foundation, and directing them to move your funds into Wespath’s low-carbon, socially responsible, Social Values Choice investment portfolios.

Time is Running Out

But let’s be honest with ourselves: time is running out for the world to achieve the goal of “a net zero economy by 2050.” This long-term goal cannot be met without short-term goals along the way. Yet instead of being on track to reach emissions reductions of 45% by 2030, which is the only pathway to net zero by 2050, global emissions are rising year after year. Some institutions that have committed to net zero are postponing action and hoping that unproven “Plan B” technologies like carbon capture and geoengineering technologies will progress enough in the next 25 years to draw down significant amounts of carbon. A more direct and safer strategy would be Plan A: phasing out fossil fuels.

It’s important to remember that the whole point of the “net zero by 2050” movement was to stabilize the climate by limiting global temperature rise to no more than 1.5°C, yet global temperatures are rising faster and higher than ever before. Average temperatures spiked to 1.45°C above pre-industrial levels throughout 2023, and breached 1.5°C throughout 2024.

This is not the end of the struggle for climate stability or for climate justice. Every fraction of a degree of warming is significant. But it is time to redouble our efforts while facing the extremity of our current global situation. Emissions are rising. Fossil fuel companies are still extracting coal, oil, and gas and constructing durable infrastructure that will lock us into decades of accelerating emissions. Temperatures are spiking. How shall we as United Methodists respond to this most challenging crisis humanity has ever faced? According to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres: “The science is clear: The 1.5°C limit is only possible if we ultimately stop burning all fossil fuels. Not reduce, not abate. Phase out, with a clear timeframe.” We need to phase out fossil fuels.

Fossil free UMC supports phasing out fossil fuels, beginning with our denominational investments, by “screening out fossil fuels from our investments and banking relationships at all levels of the church.” We are called to invest our material treasures where our hearts are, by “investing in goods and services that support a just transition to a clean energy future.” This seems like a positive next step for UMC net zero agencies: to divest from fossil fuels.

Because this is a critical decade and time is running out, we cannot wait until the 2028 General Conference to try to institute an investment screen on fossil fuels. Instead, we call on all United Methodist churches, conferences, boards, and agencies to divest from fossil fuels, beginning with the agencies that have signed the pledge to attain net zero by 2050. By doing so, we take a stand for climate justice in solidarity with vulnerable communities that are most impacted by climate change and strengthen the global movement to phase out fossil fuels.

Sharon Delgado is a preacher, activist, author, and Convener of Fossil Free UMC. Fortress Press will release the updated Second Edition of her book, Love in a Time of Climate Change, next fall.

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