Current:Home > MyAustralia Cuts Outlook for Great Barrier Reef to ‘Very Poor’ for First Time, Citing Climate Change -GrowthInsight
Australia Cuts Outlook for Great Barrier Reef to ‘Very Poor’ for First Time, Citing Climate Change
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-06 16:13:22
ICN occasionally publishes Financial Times articles to bring you more international climate reporting.
Australia has downgraded the outlook for the Great Barrier Reef to “very poor” for the first time, highlighting a fierce battle between environmental campaigners and the government over the country’s approach to climate change.
The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, a government agency, warned in a report released Friday that immediate local and global action was needed to save the world heritage site from further damage due to the escalating effects of climate change.
“The window of opportunity to improve the Reef’s long-term future is now. Strong and effective management actions are urgent at global, regional and local scales,” the agency wrote in the report, which is updated every five years.
The Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest living structure and has become a potent symbol of the damage wrought by climate change.
The deterioration of the outlook for the reef to “very poor”—from “poor” five years ago—prompted a plea from conservation groups for the Liberal-National coalition government to move decisively to cut greenhouse gas emissions and phase out the country’s reliance on coal.
Australia’s Coal and Climate Change Challenge
Emissions have risen every year in Australia since 2015, when the country became the first in the world to ax a national carbon tax.
The World Wide Fund for Nature warned the downgrade could also prompt UNESCO to place the area on its list of world heritage sites in danger. The reef contributes AUD$6.4 billion ($4.3 billion in U.S. dollars) and thousands of jobs to the economy, largely through tourism.
“Australia can continue to fail on climate policy and remain a major coal exporter or Australia can turn around the reef’s decline. But it can’t do both,” said Richard Leck, head of oceans at WWF-Australia. “That’s clear from the government’s own scientific reports.”
The government said it was taking action to reduce emissions and meet its 2030 commitments under the Paris climate agreement and criticized activists who have claimed the reef is dying.
“A fortnight ago I was on the reef, not with climate sceptics but with scientists,” Sussan Ley, Australia’s environment minister, wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald. “Their advice was clear: the Reef isn’t dead. It has vast areas of vibrant coral and teeming sea life, just as it has areas that have been damaged by coral bleaching, illegal fishing and crown of thorns [starfish] outbreaks.”
Fivefold Rise in Frequency of Severe Bleaching
The government report warned record-breaking sea temperatures, poor water quality and climate change have caused the continued degradation of the reef’s overall health.
It said coral habitats had transitioned from “poor” to “very poor” due to a mass coral bleaching event. The report added that concern for the condition of the thousands of species of plants and animals that depend on the reef was “high.”
Global warming has resulted in a fivefold increase in the frequency of severe coral bleaching events in the past four decades and slowed the rate of coral recovery. Successive mass bleaching events in 2016 and 2017 caused unprecedented levels of adult coral mortality, which reduced new coral growth by 90 percent in 2018, the report said.
© The Financial Times Limited 2019. All Rights Reserved. Not to be further redistributed, copied or modified in any way.
Published Aug. 30, 2019
veryGood! (6212)
Related
- Trump's 'stop
- In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Unintended Consequences of ‘Fortress Conservation’
- Plans To Dig the Biggest Lithium Mine in the US Face Mounting Opposition
- New Mexico Wants it ‘Both Ways,’ Insisting on Environmental Regulations While Benefiting from Oil and Gas
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Environmentalists in Chile Are Hoping to Replace the Country’s Pinochet-Era Legal Framework With an ‘Ecological Constitution’
- Inside Clean Energy: For Offshore Wind Energy, Bigger is Much Cheaper
- Well, It's Still Pride Is Reason Enough To Buy These 25 Rainbow Things
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Noah Cyrus Shares How Haters Criticizing Her Engagement Reminds Her of Being Suicidal at Age 11
Ranking
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- He 'Proved Mike Wrong.' Now he's claiming his $5 million
- Why it's so hard to mass produce houses in factories
- Little Big Town to Host First-Ever People's Choice Country Awards
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- A ‘Living Shoreline’ Takes Root in New York’s Jamaica Bay
- Pete Davidson Admits His Mom Defended Him on Twitter From Burner Account
- Shaquil Barrett and Wife Jordanna Announces She's Pregnant 2 Months After Daughter's Death
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Fox News settles blockbuster defamation lawsuit with Dominion Voting Systems
Hailey Bieber Responds to Criticism She's Not Enough of a Nepo Baby
‘Delay is Death,’ said UN Chief António Guterres of the New IPCC Report Showing Climate Impacts Are Outpacing Adaptation Efforts
What to watch: O Jolie night
As Animals Migrate Because of Climate Change, Thousands of New Viruses Will Hop From Wildlife to Humans—and Mitigation Won’t Stop Them
New Research Shows Aerosol Emissions May Have Masked Global Warming’s Supercharging of Tropical Storms
First raise the debt limit. Then we can talk about spending, the White House insists