UN warming to idea of protecting World Heritage sites from climate change

Urged 193 nations to take action to limit global average temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius

John C. Day | The Conversation 

Great Barrier Reef
Great Barrier Reef. Photo: wikimedia.org

UNESCO’s Committee has issued its strongest decision yet about climate change, acknowledging the worldwide threat posed to many properties.

The decision (see pages 26-27 here), set to be adopted today at the completion of the Committee’s annual meeting in Krakow, Poland, “expresses its utmost concern regarding the reported serious impacts from coral bleaching that have affected properties in 2016-17 and that the majority of are expected to be seriously impacted by climate change”.

It also urges the 193 signatory nations to the Convention to undertake actions to address under the Paris Agreement’s goal of limiting global average temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperatures.

This decision marks an important shift in the level of recognition by the Committee tasked with protecting properties, apparently jolted by the devastating bleaching suffered by the majority of around the world.

In the past, the Committee has restricted its decisions to addressing localised threats such as water pollution and overfishing, choosing to leave the responsibility to address global to other parts of the

In the preamble to its latest decision, the Committee has recognised that local efforts alone are “no longer sufficient” to save the world’s threatened

But while this is an encouraging progression, some members of the Committee are still struggling to come to terms with addressing the global impacts of This is despite the impacts becoming more pronounced on other properties, including glaciers, rainforests, oceanic islands, and sites showing the loss of key species.

The World Heritage-listed glacial landscape around Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps. Steinmann/Wikimedia Commons

The ‘jewels’ of marine world heritage

Last month, UNESCO’s Centre released the first global scientific assessment of the impact of on all 29 World Heritage-listed that are “the jewels in the crown”.

The report paints a dire picture, with all but three exhibiting bleaching over the past three years. Iconic sites like the Great Barrier Reef (Australia), the Northwest Hawaiian islands (United States), the Lagoons of New Caledonia (France), and Aldabra Atoll (Seychelles) have all suffered their worst bleaching on record.

The most widely reported damage was the unprecedented bleaching suffered by the Great Barrier Reef in 2016-17, which killed around 50 per cent of its corals.

The scientific report predicts that without large reductions in global greenhouse gas emissions, all 29 reefs will “cease to exist as functioning coral reef ecosystems by the end of this century”.

Reefs can take 10-20 years to recover from bleaching. If our current emissions trajectory continues, within the next two decades, 25 out of the 29 reefs will suffer severe heat stress twice a decade. This effectively means they will be unable to recover.

It should also be noted that the majority of are far better managed than other reefs around the world, so the implications of for globally are much worse.

All are important

Almost one-third of the world’s marine fish species rely on for some part of their life cycle. There are also 6 million people who fish on reefs in 99 countries and territories worldwide. This equates to about a quarter of the world’s small-scale fishers relying directly on

Half of all coral reef fishers globally are in Southeast Asia, and the western Pacific Island nations also have high proportions of reef fishers within their populations. In total, more than 400 million people in the poorest developing countries worldwide live within 100km of The majority of them depend directly on reefs for their food and livelihoods.

provide more value than any other ecosystem on Earth. They protect coastal communities from flooding and erosion, sustain fishing and tourism businesses, and host a stunning array of marine life. Their social, cultural and economic value has been estimated at US$1 trillion globally.

Recent projections indicate that climate-related loss of reef ecosystem services will total more than US$500 billion per year by 2100. The greatest impacts will be felt by the millions of people whose livelihoods depend on reefs.

Where else?

Recognising that the majority of the are expected to be seriously impacted by is a good start. However, the Committee cannot afford to wait until similar levels of adverse impacts are evident at other natural and cultural heritage sites across the world.

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The Committee and other influential bodies must continue to acknowledge that has already affected a wide range of values through climate-related impacts such as species migrations, loss of biodiversity, glacial melting, sea-level rise, increases in extreme weather events, greater frequency of wildfires, and increased coastal erosion. To help understand the magnitude of the problem, the Committee has asked the Centre and the international advisory bodies “to further study the current and potential impacts of on properties”, and report back in 2018.

The ConversationTwo of the key foundations of the World Heritage Convention are to protect the world’s cultural and natural heritage and to pass that heritage on to future generations. For our sake, and the sake of future generations, let’s hope we can do both.


Jon C. Day, PhD candidate, ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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