Queensland's Environment Minister, Steve Miles. |
The update to the UNESCO World Heritage Centre says good
progress has been made since federal and state governments last year committed
to a 35-year plan to improve the reef's health, but it falls short of what
scientists believe is necessary.
It follows the release of fresh surveys of coral death due
to inflated ocean temperatures last summer. The ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies estimated 67 per cent of coral has died in shallow reefs
north of Port Douglas, compared with just 1 per cent mortality south of Mackay.
In a foreword to the report, Environment Minister Josh
Frydenberg and his Queensland counterpart Steven Miles say the reef has been
severely affected by mass coral bleaching, and that climate change is "the
single biggest threat to reefs worldwide - and the Great Barrier Reef is no
exception".
Read Adam Morton’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “No new funding or climate commitments in Great Barrier Reef update.”
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