Article
The $8.2 billion water bill to clean up the Barrier Reef by 2025 – and where to start
Publisher
Great Barrier Reef
Conservation
Sustainability
Great Barrier Reef
Description
In 2015, the Australian and Queensland governments agreed on targets to greatly reduce the sediment and nutrient pollutants flowing onto the Great Barrier Reef.
What we do on land has a real impact out on the reef: sediments can smother the corals, while high nutrient levels help to trigger more regular and larger outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish. This damage leaves the Great Barrier Reef even more vulnerable to climate change, storms, cyclones and other impacts.
Dealing with water quality alone isn’t enough to protect the reef, as many others have pointed out before. But it is an essential ingredient in making it more resilient.
Publication Details
Copyright:
The Conversation Media Group 2016
Access Rights Type:
open
Post date:
12 Aug 2016