‘Australia concerns lead to holding-back case study on Great
Barrier Reef, so Union of Concerned Scientists posts it independently. Climate
impacts seen posing risks to sites . . . and to tourism’
Sometimes, too often in fact, it’s not what’s included in
the text of a report that captures the attention. It’s what’s omitted
from that report, often not mistakenly.
That’s a lesson learned and re-learned in the public policy
field, but apparently not really absorbed in many cases.
Those who internalized the lessons from the early-70s
Watergate scandal that led to President Nixon’s resignation know well that it’s
the cover-up, more so than the initial offense, that is the real crime. Only
slightly more recently, the original “Jaws” in 1975 taught a similar lesson, as
the fictional Amity Island town council sought to silence the truth in an
effort to protect its tourism financial interests.
Advance now to a new report, “World Heritage and Tourism in
a Changing Climate,” released May 26 by two United Nations agencies and the
Union of Concerned Scientists, UCS. In a somewhat dual-personality report that
at times seems as concerned tourism as with impacts of climate change, the
report paints a dire image of 31 natural and cultural World Heritage sites in
29 countries around the world.
Around the world, that is, save for Australia and its, ahem,
rather important Great Barrier Reef (GBR), by any practical measure a worthy
entry among top-ranking heritage and tourism sites. And clearly one with
observed and serious impacts from rising ocean temperatures, increased
acidification, and continuing carbon dioxide emissions.
Read the Yale Climate
Connections story - “U.N., UCS Point to Risks to World Heritage Sites.”
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