Australia will contest a draft recommendation to list the Great Barrier Reef as a world heritage site “in danger” after United Nations body called for more government action on climate change.
Federal Environment Minister Sussan Ley said the government was “blindsided” by the report by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee, which cited successive reef bleaching events as being of particular concern.
The long-term outlook for the reef had deteriorated from “poor to very poor”, the draft decision said. The federal government strongly opposes the move, which could put the reef’s world heritage status at risk, affecting tourism and other ventures.
“It is a backflip on previous assurances, it is a deviation from normal process and it’s based on just a desktop review without the latest information,” Ms Ley told ABC radio on Tuesday.
She agreed climate change was the biggest threat to the reef but said Australia had the best reef management practices in the world.
Australia’s views on the draft decision were made “very clear” to the director-general of UNESCO by Ms Ley and Foreign Minister Maurice Payne in a phone call on Monday night.
“We will contest this flawed approach, particularly because it’s sending a poor signal to those nations who are not making the investments in reef protection that we are making,” Ms Ley said.
The UNESCO recommendation means it’s critical for countries, including Australia, to limit global temperature increases to 1.5 degrees, the World Wide Fund for Nature’s head of oceans in Australia, Richard Leck, said.
“Clearly, the significant coral mortality has prompted UNESCO to urge the Australian government to do more on climate,” he said.
The UNESCO committee draft report “strongly invites” the government “to undertake actions to address climate change under the Paris agreement” to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions.
-AAP