Delegation to UN COP27 conference announced

Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Michael Curry has named 18 delegates—selected from among respondents to a churchwide call—to represent the presiding bishop’s office at the 2022 United Nations climate change conference, COP27. It is the eighth year the presiding bishop has convened Episcopalians in the urgent work of climate change advocacy in the global forum.

The 27th session of the Conference of Parties of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, also known as COP27, will be held November 6-18, 2022, in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. This year’s hybrid platform allows for a wider representation of Episcopalian delegates, who will participate virtually and in person in daily events.

“This is a pivotal moment when global leaders are taking seriously the witness of the American faith community,” said the Rev. Melanie Mullen, The Episcopal Church’s director of reconciliation, justice, and creation care. “We are seeking to lead the way in demanding a moral approach to addressing climate change and insisting that the communities that are impacted first and worst by climate change won’t be left behind.”

Episcopal Church delegation to focus on “loss and damage”

This year’s delegation will focus on advocacy around accountability for what the UN calls “loss and damage,” noted Bishop Marc Andrus, head of the delegation.

“Loss and damage is the devastation experienced by vulnerable communities, most often people of color—devastation of such a magnitude that whole ways of life are lost, and whole communities are forced to relocate,” he said. “We will seek to be in solidarity with such communities, and to amplify their voices that demand justice. Such solidarity is in keeping with our commitment to the Beloved Community proclaimed by Jesus.”

COP27 delegates

The delegates—who will complete in-depth advocacy training and host public reports, discussions, and events throughout the process—for COP27 are as follows:

  • The Rt. Rev. Marc Andrus, Episcopal Diocese of California, delegation head
  • Coco de Marneffe, Episcopal Diocese of New York 
  • Justin Dehnert, Episcopal Diocese of New York 
  • The Rt. Rev. Francisco Duque, Episcopal Diocese of Colombia 
  • Christopher Fullerton, Episcopal Diocese of West Texas 
  • The Rt. Rev. Carol Gallagher, Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts 
  • Seán Hansen, Episcopal Diocese of Chicago 
  • Emily Hennen, Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina 
  • Aisha Huertas, Episcopal Diocese of Virginia 
  • John Kydd, Episcopal Diocese of Olympia 
  • Kelsey Larson, Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts 
  • The Rt. Rev. Mark Lattime, Episcopal Diocese of Alaska 
  • Ethan Marshall, Episcopal Diocese of Southwest Florida 
  • Kara-Lyn Moran, Episcopal Diocese of New York 
  • Ayesha Mutope-Johnson, Episcopal Diocese of Texas 
  • Dr. M. Paloma Pavel, Episcopal Diocese of California 
  • Katie Ruth, Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania 
  • The Rev. Anna Shine, Episcopal Diocese of Western North Carolina 
  • Anita Urassa, Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe 

Delegates will report back on their experiences during an online closing event at noon Eastern Time November 30, open to all. Learn more and register.

80th General Convention with Convention Center Background

Episcopal Church focus on climate change

At The Episcopal Church’s 80th General Convention in July 2022, the House of Bishops passed a statement titled, “Expressing the Mind of the House on Climate and Our Vocation in Christ.”

The statement notes:

As people of faith, we are not without hope, but the sustainability of God’s creation demands our action. Confronting climate change and environmental degradation has never been more urgent. As members of The Episcopal Church, we are committed in baptism to resist evil, seek God’s will, treat all people with dignity, and strive for justice and peace. Living into these promises, we must face the climate crisis for the sake of love of God and neighbor.

Expressing the Mind of the House [of Bishops] on Climate and Our Vocation in Christ


The 80th General Convention also passed a resolution encouraging continuing church participation in COP meetings to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, among other commitments to the work of addressing global climate change and environmental justice.

In addition to the delegates, all Episcopalians are encouraged to participate in and promote global climate justice during and beyond COP27, as well as to join the delegates in intentional prayer prior to and during the conference.

The delegation is supported by the following Episcopal Church offices:

  • Global Partnerships/UN office
  • Department of Creation Care
  • The Office of Government Relations

For more information, email Phoebe Chatfield or Lynnaia Main

Article from the Office of Public Affairs of the Episcopal Church.

Creation Care

Creation Care

In Jesus, God so loved the whole world. We follow Jesus, so we love the world God loves. Concerned for the global climate emergency, drawing on diverse approaches for our diverse contexts, we commit to form and restore loving, liberating, life-giving relationships with all of Creation. 

The Episcopal Church’s Covenant for the Care of Creation is a commitment to practice loving formation, liberating advocacy and life-giving conversation as individuals, congregations, ministries and dioceses. Explore the Covenant here and sign up for the newsletter and opportunities to formally adopt the Covenant in your community.

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Church of the Redeemer is at 6210 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

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