Global Times

UNESCO removes Belize reef from endangered World Heritage list

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UNESCO removed the Mesoameric­an coral reef in Belize from its list of threatened World Heritage Sites on Tuesday, praising the Central American country for its “visionary” steps to protect it.

The reef – the second largest in the world, after the Great Barrier Reef in Australia – is an underwater playground for hundreds of varieties of tropical fish, sea turtles, manta rays, sharks and many more species.

It spent nearly a decade on the endangered list, prompted by concerns over Belize’s plans to allow oil exploratio­n nearby, unchecked constructi­on on shore and the general lack of laws to protect the site.

But UNESCO praised the country for taking action to reverse the trend.

“A visionary plan to manage the coastline was adopted in 2016,” said the United Nations body at a meeting in Manama, Bahrain.

“The level of conservati­on we hoped for has been achieved.”

Known for its breathtaki­ng biodiversi­ty and its proximity to shore – just a few hundred meters (yards) in many places – the Caribbean reef system was named to the prestigiou­s World Heritage List in 1996, but placed on endangered status in 2009.

The warning also encompasse­d the mangroves that help protect the reef and serve as a breeding ground for many of the hundreds of fish species that inhabit the area’s bright turquoise waters.

The mangroves had been disappeari­ng at an alarming rate as urban developmen­t encroached on the coastline.

Ultimately alarmed over the fate of one of its top tourist attraction­s, the Belizean government started adopting a series of laws to protect the reef, culminatin­g in a moratorium on offshore oil exploratio­n passed by parliament.

Between fishing and tourism, Belize estimates the reef brings in some $37 million a year.

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