Australia’s environment minister said on Tuesday the government would push against listing the Great Barrier Reef on the list of endangered World Heritage sites.
A report by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the International Union for Conservation of Nature, released Monday, warned of the need for “ambitious, rapid and sustained” action. and without which the largest reef in the world is in danger.
The document recommended including the Great Barrier Reef on a list of endangered sites, in line with the recommendations of a mission, carried out in March, to the reef system off the northeast coast of Australia, added to the World Heritage list. UNESCO World. in 1981.
“We are going to make it very clear to UNESCO that there is no need to isolate the Great Barrier Reef in this way,” Tanya Plibersek told reporters.
The new centre-left Labor government, elected in May, has already addressed several of the report’s concerns, including action on climate change, he said.
Anthony Albanese’s executive legislated to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 43% by 2030, while the previous executive, led by Scott Morrison, had only forecast a reduction of between 26% and 28% by the end of the decade.
Plibersek said the government had also committed to investing A$1.2 billion (€774 million) to care for the reef and canceled the previous government’s plans to build two large dams in the state of Queensland that would have affected water quality. of the reef. .
“If the Great Barrier Reef is in danger, then all the world’s coral reefs are in danger,” Plibersek said. “If this World Heritage site is in danger, then most World Heritage sites around the world are in danger from climate change.”
The report says the Australian federal government and Queensland authorities should adopt more ambitious emissions reduction targets in line with international efforts to limit future warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
The action by Australian authorities will be reviewed before Paris-based UNESCO makes any official proposals to the World Heritage Committee. As of 2021, the venue managed to remain off the “blacklist”.
In March, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority had confirmed that the site, the world’s largest coral system with an area of 348,000 square kilometres, was experiencing “worrying and severe” massive coral bleaching, following important whitenings in 1998., 2002, 2016, 2017 and 2020.
The reef, whose status began to be classified, at the end of 2020, by the International Union for Conservation of Nature from “significant concern” to “critical” – the worst designation for conservation – continues to be threatened by climate change.
Home to 400 types of coral, 1,500 species of fish and 4,000 varieties of mollusks, the Great Barrier Reef began to deteriorate in the 1990s due to the impact of warming seawater and increased acidity due to the increasing presence of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere.
Source: TSF