Deutsche Welle (English edition)

UNESCO defers 'in danger' decision for Australia's Great Barrier Reef

Australia successful­ly lobbied to prevent a downgrade of the Great Barrier Reef's World Heritage status. The reef attracts 5 million tourists annually and supports roughly 70,000 jobs.

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Australia narrowly avoided a downgrade of the Great Barrier Reef's World Heritage status to "in danger" on Friday, as UNESCO opted to defer the decision and seek an updated progress report.

Concerns about climate change-driven damage to the Great Barrier Reef's fragile ecosystem and corals in particular drove the discussion to the table in the first place.

A decision to classify the reef as "in danger" had already been delayed once from 2015.

The Australian government succeeded then as it succeeded now via a diplomatic lobbying effort which included taking key ambassador­s snorkeling in the Great Barrier Reef this time around.

Bleaching events and industrial­ization threaten the reef

The reef is 2,300 kilometers (1,400 miles) long and is considered one of the great natural wonders of the world. Rising ocean temperatur­es caused by global warming though have put it in peril.

Due to unusually warm ocean temperatur­es, the Great Barrier Reef has faced three bleaching events in the last five years, with one each in 2016, 2017 and last year.

The reef has also been damaged by cyclones and the crownof-thorns starfish, which eats the coral. Factories along the coast have also done damage to the waters.

Tim Badman, director of the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature's world heritage program told AFP: "the prospects for future recovery have significan­tly deteriorat­ed."

Australia's intense lobbying led by the environmen­t minister

Sussan Ley, Australia's environmen­t minister, traveled to over a dozen countries to encourage some of the 21 member nations on the UNESCO World Heritage committee to vote against reclassify­ing the Great Barrier Reef.

She addressed the group virtually from quarantine in Australia after returning from a trip to the Middle East. She also flew to Paris earlier this month to lobby certain member nations there.

"May I sincerely thank the esteemed delegates for recognizin­g Australia's commitment to protecting the Great Barrier Reef," Ley told the committee.

Environmen­talists were less pleased by the decision. Australia is heavily dependent on fossil fuels and the mining industry with minimal efforts being made to curb carbon emissions due to the cost to the economy.

David Ritter, chief executive officer of Greenpeace Australia told Reuters news agency: "This is a victory for one of the most cynical lobbying efforts in recent

history".

"This is not an achievemen­t - it is a day of infamy for the Australian government," Ritter said.

However, on the committee only Norway concurred the reef was in peril.

What happens next?

For now, Australia will have to produce an updated status report on the Great Barrier Reef in the coming years.

The delay also has political implicatio­ns in Australia where jobs and livelihood­s are contingent on the continued attractive­ness of the reef as a draw for tourists.

 ??  ?? Blue-green damselfish swim in the Great Barrier Reef
Blue-green damselfish swim in the Great Barrier Reef
 ??  ?? An aerial view of the Great Barrier Reef
An aerial view of the Great Barrier Reef

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