The Pak Banker

Climate change 'main threat' for world heritage sites

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could be evacuated.

Nearly 1,600 Pakistanis died in the floods and 33 million others were affected in a disaster "probably" made worse by global warming, according to World Weather Attributio­n, a network of researcher­s. The ancient metropolis "could have disappeare­d with all the archaeolog­ical traces" it contains, said Lazare Eloundou Assamo, the director of the World Heritage programme at UN agency UNESCO.

The Pakistani site was "a victim" of climate change and was "very lucky" to still be around, exactly 100 years since it was first discovered in 1922, Assamo said.

Fortunatel­y, "the situation is not catastroph­ic" in Mohenjo Daro, said Thierry Joffroy, a

One of the world's first cities came close to being wiped off the map during tragic floods this summer in Pakistan. Though Mohenjo Daro survived, it has become a symbol of the threat global warming poses to humanity's cultural heritage.

Built in around 3000 BC by the Indus civilisati­on in modern-day South Asia, Mohenjo Daro was not swept away by the floods, most likely thanks to the genius of its designers.

Perched high above the Indus river, the city was equipped with a primitive drainage system and sewers, meaning much of the floodwater­s specialist in brick architectu­re who visited the site on behalf of UNESCO.

Despite ground sinking in some areas and water damage to some structures, the site "can be repaired," Joffroy said. For 50 years, Parisbased UNESCO has compiled a list of World Heritage sites, significan­t places that are deemed worthy of protection, and is marking the milestone this week in Greece.

"To protect this heritage ourselves... is to confront the consequenc­es of climate disruption and the loss of biodiversi­ty. It's the main threat... that we assess in a tangible way," UNESCO director Audrey Azoulay told the conference in Delphi on Thursday.

Of its 1,154 World Heritage sites, "one site in five, and more than a third of natural sites, already see this threat as a reality," she said.

"We are experienci­ng many more incidents of floods, hurricanes, cyclones, typhoons," said Rohit Jigyasu of the Internatio­nal Center for the Study of the Conservati­on and Restoratio­n of Cultural Property (ICCROM).

"We have these climate-related disasters, which are having a huge impact on sites, for example Mohenjo Daro," he said.

Huge forest fires have scorched the Rocky Mountains in Canada, which are a world heritage site, and this year flames came within 15 kilometres (nine miles) of Delphi as heatwave intensify the severity of wildfires across the Mediterran­ean basin.

In Peru, meanwhile, landslides occurred this year at the foot of Machu Picchu in the Andes mountains. Other less noticeable changes can also have serious consequenc­es.

In Australia, the protected Great Barrier Reef is experienci­ng bleaching episodes due to rising water temperatur­es.

In Ghana, erosion has washed away part of Fort Prinzenste­in, which is conserved as a notable slave trading post.

"Slow factors" that do not have an immediate impact pose "new kinds of risks in many of these sites," Jigyasu said. These include invasions of wood-eating termites in areas that were previously either too dry or too cold for the insects to thrive.

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