Australian PM pledges A$1 bln to help ailing Great Barrier Reef

Date: 14-Jun-16
Country: AUSTRALIA
Author: Peter Gosnell

Australian PM pledges A$1 bln to help ailing Great Barrier ReefPhoto: Lukas Coch/AAP

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull speaks to the media during a news conference on the Great Barrier Reef in Townsville, Australia, June 13, 2016 AAP
Photo: Lukas Coch/AAP

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, facing a tight re-election battle, pledged on Monday a A$1 billion ($738 million) fund for the Great Barrier Reef, where scientists say mass coral bleaching has destroyed vast tracts of the World Heritage site.

A report late last month said mass coral bleaching, caused by climate change, had destroyed at least 35 percent of the northern and central Great Barrier Reef and that the coral mortality rate would likely rise.

The report cast a shadow over the long-term prospects for the reef, which attracts about A$5 billion ($3.7 billion) in tourism each year. Scientists also believe UNESCO may reconsider its decision not to put the reef on its endangered list.

Turnbull, on the campaign trail for the July 2 election in tropical northern Queensland state, the usual jumping-off point for tourists going to the reef, said he would instruct Australia's Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC) to redirect A$1 billion of its A$10 billion fund.

The money would go to a loans scheme aimed at reducing the agricultural and waste water run-off that is diminishing the reef's ability to withstand rising sea temperatures.

"Much of this will come in the form of financing solar energy, which of course will reduce emissions but also enable farmers to manage their land more efficiently ..." Turnbull told reporters in Townsville.

Pollution from water-borne fertilizer and nutrient-rich run-off limits the ability of corals to withstand higher sea temperatures associated with cyclical El Nino weather events and global warming.

Bleaching occurs when the water is too warm, forcing coral to expel living algae and calcify.

The findings of the bleaching survey came at a bad time for Turnbull, who was under pressure after Australia's Department of Environment confirmed it had omitted its contribution to a U.N. report on the impact of climate change on world heritage sites over concerns it might have a negative impact on tourism.

Turnbull's conservative coalition began the seven-weak election campaign with a healthy lead over the center-left Labor opposition but opinion polls now have them neck-and-neck.

Labor, which announced a A$500 million ($369 million), five-year plan for the reef last month, criticized Turnbull for "raiding" the CEFC to fund his pledge.

"Malcolm Turnbull is misleading Queenslanders and other Australians in saying he's providing any additional funding to the Great Barrier Reef at a time of great crisis," Labor's environment spokesman, Mark Butler, told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

Scientists are unsure how much of the damaged areas of the reef will regenerate as winter brings cooler temperatures.

(Editing by Paul Tait)

Reuters

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