Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumGreat Barrier Reef 2050 Plan "No Longer Possible"- Warming Moving Too Fast - Guardian
The central aim of the governments plan to protect the Great Barrier Reef is no longer achievable due to the dramatic impacts of climate change, experts have told the governments advisory committees for the plan.
Environmental lawyers said the revelation could mean the Great Barrier Reef might finally be listed as a world heritage site in danger, a move the federal and Queensland governments have strenuously fought.
The federal and Queensland governments Reef 2050 Long Term Sustainability Plan was released in 2015, with its central vision to ensure the Great Barrier Reef continues to improve on its outstanding universal values. The plan was created to satisfy the Unesco World Heritage Centre, which was considering adding the Great Barrier Reef to its list of world heritage sites in danger, that its condition could be improved.
But in a meeting of the Reef 2050 advisory committee, whose role is to provide advice to state and federal environment ministers on implementing the plan, two experts from government science agencies said improving the natural heritage values of the reef was no longer possible. With climate change causing unprecedented back-to-back mass bleaching events in 2016 and 2017, killing almost half of the coral, and with the risk of those events set to increase in the coming years, loss of coral cover and biodiversity was virtually assured.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/may/25/great-barrier-reef-2050-plan-no-longer-achievable-due-to-climate-change-experts-say
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(21,024 posts)GliderGuider
(21,088 posts)OKIsItJustMe
(19,938 posts)INDEPENDENT EXPERT PANEL COMMUNIQUÈ 5 MAY 2017
The seventh meeting of the Reef 2050 Plan Independent Expert Panel was held today in Brisbane, chaired by Professor Ian Chubb AC. The meeting was a dedicated workshop to develop advice on protection of the Great Barrier Reef in light of widespread coral bleaching in both 2016 and 2017.
The Panel were united in their concern about the seriousness of the impacts facing the Reef and concluded that coral bleaching since early 2016 has changed the Reef fundamentally. There is great concern about the future of the Reef, and the communities and businesses that depend on it, but hope still remains for maintaining ecological function over the coming decades.
Members agreed that in our lifetime and on our watch, substantial areas of the Great Barrier Reef and the surrounding ecosystems are experiencing major long-term damage which may be irreversible unless action is taken now. The planet has changed in a way that science informs us is unprecedented in human history. While that in itself may be cause for action, the extraordinary rapidity of the change we now observe makes action even more urgent.
The Panel considers that action to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases must be central to the response. This needs to be coupled with increased efforts to improve the resilience of the coral and other ecosystems that form the Great Barrier Reef. The focus of efforts should be on managing the Reef to maintain the benefits that the Reef provides.