One in ten natural World Heritage Sites in Danger – IUCN
One in ten natural World Heritage Sites in Danger
– IUCN
St Petersburg, Russian
Federation, 23 June 2012 (IUCN) – UNESCO’s
World Heritage Committee’s annual meeting, which starts in
St Petersburg on Sunday, will see a total of 36 new sites
considered for inscription as natural and cultural sites,
and a series of monitoring reports on the sites already
listed. But if IUCN’s recommendations to add four World
Heritage sites to the Danger List are accepted, 21 out of
the 211 –one in ten- natural World Heritage Sites will be
officially “in danger.”
“World Heritage
Sites are icons of global conservation, but even these
places are coming under increasing pressures,” says Tim
Badman, Director of IUCN’s World Heritage Programme.
“The Convention is 40 this year, and it will need to do
much more to protect its listed sites in the next ten years,
and especially those that are in Danger, if the gold
standard of World Heritage listing is to be retained. This
fortieth anniversary year of the Convention is celebrating
communities, and we consider greater benefits from World
Heritage to people will be a key requirement for
conservation success.”
The International Union
for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), World Heritage’s
advisory body on nature, will present its expert
recommendations for four new natural areas and its findings
about World Heritage Sites with imminent threats to their
values. IUCN recommends four natural sites for inscription:
Sangha Trinational - shared between Cameroon, the Central
African Republic and the Republic of Congo, Lakes of
Ounianga in Chad, Chengjiang fossil site in China and Rock
Islands Southern Lagoon in Palau. In addition, reports will
be made on 56 other iconic sites, including on the issues
facing Galapagos Islands, Great Barrier Reef and Serengeti.
IUCN is recommending Lake Turkana National Parks in Kenya,
Pitons Management Area in Saint Lucia, Virgin Komi Forests
in Russia and Dja Faunal Reserve in Cameroun to be added to
the Danger list.
Natural World Heritage sites in
West and Central Africa face the most serious threats,
mainly from mining, oil and gas exploration, poaching and
armed conflicts. Iconic places such as Niokolo-Koba National
Park in Senegal and Manovo-Gounda St Floris National Park in
CAR are in imminent danger of losing their Outstanding
Universal Value. 10 out of 16 natural and mixed (natural and
cultural) sites in the region are on the Danger list.
“The need for urgent action to save what is left
of these parks is evident,” says Mariam Kenza Ali, World
Heritage Conservation Officer at IUCN.“In Niokolo-Koba in
Senegal for example, the elephant population is almost gone,
very few lions remain and the population of most of the
antelopes’ species have been decimated. The situation is
the same in Comoé National Park, Ivory Coast and is equally
critical in many other protected areas in the region. The
funding to make rescue plans work is difficult to find, and
sometimes the political willingness is missing
dramatically.”
Mining and oil and gas exploration
within World Heritage Sites is also on the rise, according
to IUCN. Such activities are already causing irreversible
damage to places of unique natural value such as Virunga in
DRC and Virgin Komi Forests in Russia. An independent report
on World Heritage sites and the extractive industries will
be launched during the World Heritage St Petersburg meeting.
Its recommendations will include the establishment of a
level playing field for all parties so that policies related
to extractive industries are as uniform as possible,
regardless of the country in which the World Heritage Site
is located.
www.iucn.org/worldheritage
ENDS