The Borneo Post

Saving underwater wonder world of Belize’s reef

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SAN PEDRO, Belize: Just a stone’s throw off the coast of Belize, brightly coloured tropical fish mingle with sharks, manta rays and sea turtles around a sprawling reef beneath the bright turquoise waters of the Caribbean.

The Mesoameric­an Reef, an underwater wonder world whose survival was considered to be at risk for years, may now be removed from UNESCO’s list of threatened World Heritage Sites thanks to bold steps to save it by environmen­tal activists and the Belizean government.

Second in size only to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, the Caribbean reef was named to the prestigiou­s World Heritage List in 1996, but placed on endangered status in 2009 because of Belize’s plans to allow oil exploratio­n nearby and the general lack of laws to protect the site.

Notably, 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.

That spurred activists into action.

They organised an informal referendum in 2012 in which 96 per cent of Belizeans voted against offshore oil exploratio­n, choosing the reef over the potential economic gains for the poor Central American country.

As the threat to one of its top tourist attraction­s began to sink in, the Belizean government adopted a series of laws to protect the reef - notably one in December that places an indefinite moratorium on oil exploratio­n.

It came just in time for this week’s UNESCO meeting in Manama, Bahrain, where the UN body is due to consider removing the reef from its list of endangered heritage sites.

Stretching from the tip of Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula all the way to Guatemala and Honduras, the reef includes 380 kilometres (nearly 240 miles) in the waters off Belize, the portion covered by World Heritage status.

A popular spot with divers, it spans 96,000 hectares ( 237,220 acres) and is home to one of the largest ecosystems in the Atlantic ocean.

 ??  ?? A woman snorkels at the Hol Chan Marine Reserve coral reef in the outskirts of San Pedro village, in Ambergris Cay, Belize, on June 6.
A woman snorkels at the Hol Chan Marine Reserve coral reef in the outskirts of San Pedro village, in Ambergris Cay, Belize, on June 6.
 ?? — AFP photos by Pedro Pardo ?? Students remain next to a mural of the Hol Chan Marine Reserve coral reef in the outskirts of San Pedro village, in Ambergris Cay, Belize, on June 7. Backed by legislatio­n passed in 2017, Belize is taking steps to ensure that its reef barrier, the...
— AFP photos by Pedro Pardo Students remain next to a mural of the Hol Chan Marine Reserve coral reef in the outskirts of San Pedro village, in Ambergris Cay, Belize, on June 7. Backed by legislatio­n passed in 2017, Belize is taking steps to ensure that its reef barrier, the...

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