Pope Leo, in climate push, to open Vatican-run ecological training centre

By Joshua McElwee

CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (Reuters) -Pope Leo will open a new Vatican-run ecological training centre in the Italian countryside on Friday, in an initiative Catholic officials say is meant to encourage world leaders to address global climate change.

The centre, located across 55 hectares (136 acres) on the sprawling grounds of a Renaissance-era papal villa in Castel Gandolfo, includes gardens, vocational training facilities, and educational opportunities for local children.

Rev. Manuel Dorantes, a U.S. priest directing the centre, said the Vatican wants to set an example for how countries should pursue environmental initiatives.

“If we, the smallest city-state in the world, can do this, what is the potential for other states that are bigger than us?” he said. “Our world can be different if we work together.”

The ecological project, named the “Borgo Laudato Si”, was first announced in 2023 by the late Pope Francis, who was a firm proponent of environmental care. The centre’s large surface area represents about 55 percent of the Vatican’s total landholdings, according to officials.

The centre is named after a major 2015 document by Francis, which was the first papal text to embrace the scientific consensus about climate change and urged nations to reduce their carbon emissions.

Leo, the first U.S. pope, has also emphasised the Church’s environmental teachings. In July, the new pontiff approved a first-of-its-kind rite allowing priests to celebrate Masses that exhort Catholics to exercise care for the Earth.

Castel Gandolfo is about an hour’s drive southeast of Rome on the shores of Lake Albano. A place where popes have spent summer vacations for centuries, the new centre is attached to the building where Leo took his holidays earlier this year.

At the heart of the new institute is a greenhouse built in a curved shape to imitate the colonnade in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican.

Officials say visiting groups will be able to learn about organic farming in the greenhouse, or take classes in an adjacent 10-room educational facility.

Tourists, who can book a visit, will also be able to buy local agricultural products, including wine grown from vineyards on the Vatican grounds, organic olive oil, and cheese made from 60 cows living on the site.

(Reporting by Joshua McElwee; additional reporting by Claudia Chieppa; editing by William Maclean)

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