
The event, which will run from 3pm to 4pm, will feature online speakers who were on the ground in Belém, Brazil, for the biggest climate conference of the year.
Guests are welcome to join virtually or in-person at the London Jesuit Centre, 114 Mount Street, London, W1K 3AH.
Daniela Alba
Daniela is the Advocacy Coordinator for the Social Justice and Ecology Secretariat of the General Curia of the Society of Jesus, Rome. Originally from Bogota, Daniela is particularly focused on advocacy for those affected by gender-based violence and cross-cultural issues.
Colm Fahy
Colm is an Ecology Advocacy officer at the Jesuit European Social Centre, Brussels. He works at the intersection between human rights and ecology with just transition being one particular focus. He has a Masters in World History and Cultures from King’s College London and previously worked at Jesuit Missions, the Jesuits’ international development office in Britain, before moving to Brussels.
Patricia Tahirindray
Patricia is a Programme Coordinator at the Centre Arrupe in Antananarivo, Madagascar, a Jesuit work which coordinates the Social and Ecological Apostolate in the country (APSE) and focuses on environmental awareness, sustainable development, gender equality, and support for vulnerable populations, such as those with HIV.
Jesuit Missions – as part of the Jesuits for Climate Justice campaign group – has provided extensive coverage of COP30, producing and sharing a host of resources, which can be found here.

Join Dr Aidan Cottrell-Boyce and Fr Christophere Ngolele SJ for the second Laudato Si’ lecture. Fr Christophere, a Jesuit priest and SOAS researcher, explores how the displacement of Congo’s autochthonous peoples reflects the “technocratic paradigm” and loss of “integral ecology” described in Laudato Si’.