Dear journalists and editors
UNESCO today expressed serious concern about Australia's Great Barrier Reef
at it World Heritage Committee Meeting in Krakow, Poland. Greenpeace's media
statement on this damning decision can be found below.
Best regards,
Tristan
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UNESCO decision exposes Australia’s
stunning hypocrisy on the Great Barrier ReefKrakow, 5 July 2017 -
UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee expressed it serious concern for the state of
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, just weeks after releasing a study that warned
keeping global warming at well below 1.5-2°C above pre-industrial levels is the
only way to save the Reef.
In May of this year, it was revealed that up
to 50% of the Reef has died as a result of two mass bleaching events - one in
2016 and another in 2017 [1].
“The health of our reefs is the great
canary in the coal mine. Rather than transition away from coal like some of our
major trading partners, we are driving ahead with what will be one of the
biggest coal mines right next to the Reef,” said Alix Foster Vander Elst,
Greenpeace Australia Pacific Campaigner.
“The Australian government says
it’s committed to preserving the Reef for future generations, but its actions
make it quite clear it doesn’t care enough to do what we need to save
it.”
The Australian Government is considering a loan of AU$1 billion
(US$700 million) to enable the construction of the biggest coal mine ever built
in the country.
“When the Government is spending fifty five times more on
fossil fuel subsidies than on its much-touted Reef 2050 plan, it’s quite clear
what its priorities really are. The Carmichael mine is a climate bomb that
endangers the Reef and defies the Paris climate agreement,” said Foster
Vander Elst [2].
Both the UNESCO World Heritage Committee and the
Government’s own Reef 2050 Advisory Committee have warned that the Government’s
Reef 2050 Plan, which primarily addresses water quality and land clearing, is
inadequate and will not work because it does not address climate change - the
primary threat to the Reef.
“Coal consumption in China is stalling while
just recently South Korea committed to phase out coal and nuclear, and India is
producing solar energy cheaper than fossil fuels. While our trading partners
look towards a clean energy future, we’re stuck in the past,” said Foster Vander
Elst.
“We intend to hold the Australian government as well as all G20
nations to account for their climate action as they meet in Germany this week.
The state of the Reef can be no greater a reminder for stronger, and more urgent
climate action.”
UNESCO’s scientific report on coral reefs released on 23
June warns the only way to save the Reef from certain destruction before the end
of the century is to halt global warming at well below 1.5-2°C above
pre-industrial levels.
Notes to editors:Photo and video
can be accessed here, including drone footage of bleached coral:
http://act.gp/2tL2N6yGreenpeace’s newly updated
report,
‘The
double threat to the Great Barrier Reef: climate change and the Australian
Government’ offers a background briefing and timeline on UNESCO, the
Australian Government and the Reef.
[1] On 29 May 2017 the Great
Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority announced that the extent of the 2016 coral
death on the Reef was 29%. While the 2017 mortality figures are not yet
confirmed, a figure of an additional 19% is anticipated, as was reported to the
Australian Senate Estimates on 22 May 2017 by the Chairman of the Great Barrier
Reef Marine Park Authority, Dr Russell Reichelt.
[2] See Greenpeace
Report April 2016,
‘Exporting climate change, killing the reef’[3] The Reef 2050 Plan
has a price-tag of $AU2 billion over 10 years - or $AU200 million a year - but
Market Forces has identified $AU11 billion in taxpayer funded fossil fuel
subsidies provided by the Australian Government each year:
‘How your taxes subsidise fossil
fuels' - Market Forces.
Media contacts:Rachael
Vincent, Media Campaigner, Greenpeace Australia Pacific
+61 413 993 316 rachael...@greenpeace.orgGreenpeace
International Press Desk,
+31 (0) 20 718 2470 (available 24 hours),
pressd...@greenpeace.org --
Tristan Tremschnig
Communications Hub Manager | Asia
Pacific
Ecological North West
Line * St. Petersburg, Russia