By Dermot O’Gorman| @DermotOz
In less than 24 hours, UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee gathers in Doha to cast an important vote that will impact the future of our Great Barrier Reef.
They’re not the only ones voting on the Reef though. Over the past three weeks, more than 200,000 people in a staggering 160 countries have voted to see the Reef protected. From Colombia to the Coral Triangle and Cairns to Coober Pedy, the message is loud and clear; we want the Reef protected for future generations – dumping dredge spoil in World Heritage Waters is not ok.
As Australians we are very proud of our World Heritage listed Great Barrier Reef. Referred to as the ‘Amazon of the ocean’, it’s home to 1,500 different species of fish and a diverse marine life – and incredibly, the only organism visible from space.
You would think our World Heritage Reef would be one of the most protected places in Australia, if not the world. But shockingly our Reef is at risk of massive industrialisation with plans for four mega port developments along the Queensland coast, including one of the world’s largest coal ports at Abbot Point – just 50km for the Whitsunday Islands – and 7,000 ships crossing the Reef each year.
To make way for the proposed new mega ports and shipping ‘superhighways’ there are plans on the table for millions of tonnes of seabed to be dumped in World Heritage waters. Already the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority – the very people who should be protecting the Reef – have approved dumping of 3 million cubic metres to be dumped at Abbot Point. That’s a big number, so to put it into perspective, picture 150 thousand dump trucks, stretching end to end, from Brisbane to Melbourne.