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‘Urgent’, Australia to protect Great Barrier Reef — UNESCO

By Nidz Godino

“Urgent and sustained action is of utmost priority,” Australia must take “urgent” action to protect  Great Barrier Reef, including setting more ambitious climate targets,  UN’s cultural organization has warned.

In  draft decision, UNESCO also asked Australia to submit  update on protection efforts early next year, but stopped short of recommending  reef be placed on its list of endangered heritage sites.

Decision, was welcomed by Australia’s Minister for the Environment and Water Tanya Plibersek as a “huge win”.

“We are acting on climate change, improving local water quality, protecting our marine life, dealing with invasive species, and investing  record amount of money into reef programs,” she said in a statement.

But  UNESCO decision, which will guide  meeting of  World Heritage Committee in New Delhi next month, warns  world’s largest coral system “remains under serious threat.”

Fate  of  reef has been  recurrent source of tension between UNESCO and Australian authorities, with World Heritage Committee threatening to put world’s largest coral system on its list of “in danger” global heritage sites.

Behind–scenes diplomacy and lobbying from Australia have avoided such  move and commitments from  Labour government of Anthony Albanese have drawn praise from  Paris-based organization.

Draft  decision welcomed some of the steps taken by Australia, including on water quality around  reef and restrictions on gill-net fishing.

But it expressed “high concern” about land clearing threatening water quality, and said Australia should “set more ambitious emission reduction targets.”

Citing  ongoing mass bleaching of  reef, it asked for  update by next February, rebuffing Australia’s request to wait until 2026.

It also urged Australia to make public “as soon as possible” details on reef mortality rates in  latest round of bleaching.

Plibersek said UNESCO had recognized Australian efforts to protect  reef.

“Today’s draft decision is  huge win for Queensland,  huge win for thousands of people who rely on  reef for work, and  huge win for all  plants and animals that call it home,” she said.

Environmental groups, however, said UNESCO decision should be  “wake-up call”.

“UNESCO has asked Australia to set more ambitious climate targets, and given us  February 2025 deadline to submit  progress report  clock is ticking,” said Greenpeace Australia Pacific CEO David Ritter.

World Wide Fund for Nature-Australia also released new images  showing bleached and dead coral on the reef.

Group  urged Australia to commit to  federal emissions reduction target of at least 90 percent below 2005 levels by 2035 and to stop approving new fossil fuel projects.

Australia currently targets reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 43 percent from 2005 levels by 2030 and achieving net zero by 2050.

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