Unesco urged to probe Great Barrier Reef deforestation

IANS  |  Sydney 

Four Australian non-profits have urged the Unesco to probe the government over its failure to conserve the against deforestation, a letter revealed on Monday.

"The (Malcolm) claims it's working hard to save the but it's taking little action on the biggest threats to the - climate change and deforestation," Lyndon Schneiders, of the Wilderness Society, said in a joint statement.

According to the non-profit groups, is leading to more sediments and nutrients in the waters of the which could block light that corals need to survive.

WWF-warned that the Reef could disappear if the did not to take stronger action against climate change.

According to the statement, owing to permits issued by the previous government of the state of Queensland, around 36,600 hectares of primary forest have been earmarked to be bulldozed to make way for high value agriculture in the catchments of the Reef.

The current government cannot cancel the permits retrospectively. But they can be annulled by the

The Reef, which is home to 400 types of corals, 1,500 species of fish and 4,000 varieties of molluscs, contributes around AU$6.4 billion ($4 billion) annually.

The biggest coral system in the world has been vulnerable since the 1990s owing to warming oceans and increasing acidity levels in the waters.

--IANS

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First Published: Mon, June 25 2018. 13:48 IST