The Daily Star, May 04, 2013
SYDNEY:
Australia insisted it was committed to protecting the Great Barrier Reef on
Saturday after the UN warned that the natural wonder's world heritage status
could be in downgraded in 2014.
UNESCO said
little had been done to address concerns about rampant coastal development and
water quality raised a year ago with the Australian government in a warning
that its heritage status was at risk.
"The
state party has made progress on some key issues and actions but progress on
several recommendations, including those related to water quality and measures
to prevent coastal development ... remains limited," UNESCO said ahead of
its annual congress next month in Phnom Penh.
"Urgent
and decisive action is needed to address these issues."
Without a
"firm and demonstrable commitment on these priority issues" UNESCO
said the reef should be considered for inscription on the list of world
heritage sites in danger in 2014.
Australian
Prime Minister Julia Gillard said her government had taken steps to increase
protection of the reef, including Aus$200 million (US$206 million) towards the
Reef Rescue water quality project.
"We
are very committed to keeping the Great Barrier Reef as the wonderful heritage
area for the world that it is and for our nation," Gillard told repoters.
But
environmental group WWF said UNESCO had "put Australia in the sin
bin".
"The
expert bodies are so concerned that they are recommending an immediate halt to
approvals of coastal development projects that could individually or
cumulatively impact on the reef's world heritage values until (Australia's
state and national) governments have properly responded to their
recommendations," said WWF's Richard Leck.
Australia's
environmentally-driven Greens party said the latest UNESCO report was a "slap
on the wrist" for the government, with most sites on the heritage in
danger list in developing nations or war zones.
"This
is the world heritage body warning us that we need to (do) better or our reef,
our most precious tourism icon, will be put on the world heritage endangered
list, along with other countries like Yemen, the Congo and Afghanistan,"
said Greens Senator Larissa Waters.
Australia
is riding an unprecedented wave of resources investment due to booming demand
from Asia, with hundreds of billions of dollars worth of resource projects in
the pipeline.
Last June
UNESCO said the sheer number and scale of proposals, including liquefied
natural gas, tourism and mining projects, could threaten the reef's status.

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