Climate change damaging more World Heritage sites

3, Dec 2020 | nepaltraveller.com
Source::AP

Sixteen World Heritage sites have deteriorated since the last World Heritage Outlook was released three years ago, while only eight improved.

GENEVA

AP

Climate change is increasingly damaging the U.N.’s most cherished heritage sites, a leading conservation agency warned Wednesday, reporting that Australia’s Great Barrier Reef and dozens of other natural wonders are facing severe threats.

Climate change that has lead to shrinking glaciers, increasing fires, floods and droughts, and the bleaching of coral reefs are among the troubles facing 83 of the 252 World Heritage Sites listed by UNESCO, the U.N.’s cultural agency.

Sixteen World Heritage sites have deteriorated since the last World Heritage Outlook was released three years ago, while only eight improved, said the International Union for Conservation of Nature, made up of governments and civil society groups and advises UNESCO on natural threats to those sites.

“Natural World Heritage sites are amongst the world’s most precious places, and we owe it to future generations to protect them,” IUCN Director-General Bruno Oberle said. “Climate change is wreaking (havoc) on natural World Heritage, from shrinking glaciers to coral bleaching to increasingly frequent and severe fires and droughts.”

The report says the Great Barrier Reef, where ocean warming, acidification and extreme weather have added to the coral decline and shrinking marine species populations, was one of four sites in Australia under “very high” threat.

The islands of protected areas in the Gulf of California in Mexico have also entered the “critical” category in the listing. Spain’s Garajonay National Park, Olympic National Park in the United States, and Mexico’s Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve are among those under “very high” threat, the new report said.

It said while 63% of the heritage sites are classified as “good” or “good with some concerns,” 30% are of “significant concern” and 7% are in “critical” shape.

In a difference from the previous two IUCN reports, climate change has eclipsed “invasive alien species” — such as when foreign rodents, fish or plants are transplanted, accidentally or not, to new environments — as the most potent threat against such sites.

Human activities like tourism, hunting and fishing, and livestock grazing have also had an impact.

ALSO READ

US Tightens Definition Of Service Animals Allowed On Planes

Provo Will Keep Bridal Veil Falls Tourist Spot Public Land

Reconstruction Report Of The Historic Ranipokhari Of Bhaktapur Prepared

Dilasaini In Baitadi Goes Into 11-Day Lockdown

Halesi Shrine In Khotang Reopened After 8 Months

Number Of Active Cases Decreases

Ireland Ends Second Wave Lockdown

 

join our newsLetter

powered by : nepal traveller digital publication pvt. ltd

developed by : Web House Nepal