Live
- Tight security arrangements at Group-II examination centers District SP
- Alia Bhatt captures attention in white
- Varun Dhawan talks about ‘Baby John’
- ‘Moonwalk’ trailer promises a quirky heist, love, and loyalty
- Combat leaf spot disease
- Ahsaas Channaopens up about her complex character in ‘Mismatched 3’
- Radhika Apte welcomes first child, shares heartfelt post
- Jacqueline dazzles at Da-Bangg Reloaded concert
- Time to boost measures to prevent drowning, save children: WHO
- TDP achieves milestone with 73 lakhs membership registration, says Chandrababu
Just In
Great Barrier Reef faces irreversible impacts of climate change: Report
An Australian government commissioned report on Thursday revealed that the impacts of climate change on the iconic Great Barrier Reef could become irreversible within decades.
Canberra: An Australian government-commissioned report on Thursday revealed that the impacts of climate change on the iconic Great Barrier Reef could become irreversible within decades.
The report, published by the Australian Academy of Science (AAS) assessed the possible futures of the Great Barrier Reef under different emissions scenarios, reports Xinhua news agency.
It concluded that by 2050 the damage to the world's largest coral reef could be irreparable regardless of whether global carbon emissions stabilise or not.
The report was ordered by the federal Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, which engaged the AAS to hold three expert roundtables on climate impacts on the Great Barrier Reef, interventions and the reef's future.
More than 80 leading experts contributed to the report.
It was delivered to the Reef 2050 Plan Independent Expert Panel to consider in its advice to the government on the resilience of the GBR and its connected systems.
"It reminds us that sticking to that path we are currently on, simply because we started on it, will not offer the best solution for the Great Barrier Reef," Chennupati Jagadish, President of the AAS, said in a statement.
"It highlights that in the medium-term, there are opportunities to slow the decline in the health of the reef, however, this requires Australia to take further action now."
The report makes several recommendations to improve management of the reef, including establishing a comprehensive review of the current system, further relying on Indigenous knowledge of land management and standardising and centralizing ecological data from the Great Barrier Reef.
"Truthful, open, and clear communication with the public is needed to prepare Australians for what is to come, given the Great Barrier Reef will continue to change as the environment becomes more challenging for its habitats and species," it said.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com