Texarkana Gazette

Australia pledges $704 million to save Great Barrier Reef

- By Rod McGuirk The Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia — The Australian government on Friday pledged to spend another 1 billion Australian dollars ($704 million) over nine years on improving the health of the Great Barrier Reef after stalling a UNESCO decision on downgradin­g the natural wonder’s World Heritage status.

Critics argue the investment is a bid to improve the ruling conservati­ve coalition’s green credential­s ahead of looming elections while doing nothing to change the greatest threat to the coral: rising ocean temperatur­es.

Of the funding, AU$580 million will go toward working with land managers along Australia’s northeast coast to remediate erosion, improve land conditions and reduce nutrient and pesticide runoff.

Another AU$253 million will support the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which manages the world’s largest coral reef ecosystem, in efforts to reduce threats from the crown-of-thorns starfish and to prevent illegal fishing.

Also, AU$93 million is slated for research to make the reef more resilient and to boost adaptation strategies.

“We are backing the health of the reef and the economic future of tourism operators, hospitalit­y providers and Queensland communitie­s that are at the heart of the reef economy,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said.

In July last year, Australia garnered enough internatio­nal support to defer an attempt by UNESCO, the United Nations’ cultural organizati­on, to downgrade the reef’s World Heritage status to “in danger” because of damage caused by climate change.

The reef has suffered significan­tly from coral bleaching caused by unusually warm ocean temperatur­es in 2016, 2017 and 2020. The bleaching damaged twothirds of the coral.

But the question will be back on the World Heritage Committee’s agenda at its next annual meeting in June.

UNESCO had asked Australia to provide more informatio­n by next Tuesday about what’s being done to protect the coral. The government said on Friday it will meet that deadline.

The opposition Labor Party’s deputy leader Richard Marles dismissed the funding announceme­nt as posturing.

“You cannot be serious about supporting the Great Barrier Reef if you are not serious about action on climate change. Scott Morrison is not,” Marles said.

Labor says Australia would set a more ambitious target of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 43% by the end of the decade if the government changes hands in elections due by May.

 ?? Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority via AP ?? Q A green turtle swims Jan. 26, 2019, in waters of Ribbon Reef No 10 near Cairns, Australia. The Australian government on Friday pledged to spend another 1 billion Australian dollars ($704 million) over nine years on improving the health of the Great Barrier Reef after stalling a UNESCO decision on downgradin­g the natural wonder’s World Heritage status.
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority via AP Q A green turtle swims Jan. 26, 2019, in waters of Ribbon Reef No 10 near Cairns, Australia. The Australian government on Friday pledged to spend another 1 billion Australian dollars ($704 million) over nine years on improving the health of the Great Barrier Reef after stalling a UNESCO decision on downgradin­g the natural wonder’s World Heritage status.

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