Dubai Telegraph - Climate change 'main threat' for world heritage sites

EUR -
AED 4.370669
AFN 78.547025
ALL 96.278273
AMD 450.622905
ANG 2.130388
AOA 1091.328986
ARS 1722.405317
AUD 1.696403
AWG 2.142194
AZN 2.027299
BAM 1.948242
BBD 2.397439
BDT 145.456903
BGN 1.998632
BHD 0.448652
BIF 3526.404033
BMD 1.190108
BND 1.507439
BOB 8.225227
BRL 6.216527
BSD 1.190302
BTN 109.307763
BWP 15.571644
BYN 3.390219
BYR 23326.113255
BZD 2.393953
CAD 1.609722
CDF 2686.669586
CHF 0.915437
CLF 0.025998
CLP 1026.336493
CNY 8.269346
CNH 8.273029
COP 4348.154126
CRC 589.42316
CUC 1.190108
CUP 31.537857
CVE 109.839785
CZK 24.336455
DJF 211.96123
DKK 7.467284
DOP 74.93895
DZD 154.05412
EGP 55.854602
ERN 17.851617
ETB 184.910124
FJD 2.613417
FKP 0.862744
GBP 0.866184
GEL 3.207311
GGP 0.862744
GHS 13.03963
GIP 0.862744
GMD 87.474037
GNF 10444.566682
GTQ 9.129733
GYD 249.028048
HKD 9.291725
HNL 31.417639
HRK 7.529934
HTG 155.774996
HUF 380.663726
IDR 19981.910283
ILS 3.677993
IMP 0.862744
INR 109.392866
IQD 1559.343768
IRR 50133.292068
ISK 144.991072
JEP 0.862744
JMD 186.526346
JOD 0.84382
JPY 183.952632
KES 153.523692
KGS 104.074336
KHR 4786.390347
KMF 490.324072
KPW 1071.195635
KRW 1717.629069
KWD 0.365042
KYD 0.991765
KZT 598.65749
LAK 25616.049626
LBP 106592.204903
LKR 368.1019
LRD 214.546736
LSL 18.899793
LTL 3.514079
LVL 0.719884
LYD 7.469085
MAD 10.797202
MDL 20.016559
MGA 5319.451876
MKD 61.630387
MMK 2499.281315
MNT 4245.956935
MOP 9.571785
MRU 47.493541
MUR 54.066684
MVR 18.387421
MWK 2064.02702
MXN 20.580588
MYR 4.691392
MZN 75.869455
NAD 18.899793
NGN 1652.869038
NIO 43.800805
NOK 11.394485
NPR 174.888761
NZD 1.960817
OMR 0.4576
PAB 1.190302
PEN 3.979727
PGK 5.095275
PHP 70.13127
PKR 333.014626
PLN 4.205883
PYG 7973.067429
QAR 4.339763
RON 5.098662
RSD 117.438673
RUB 90.603841
RWF 1736.335388
SAR 4.46358
SBD 9.59001
SCR 16.419937
SDG 715.847357
SEK 10.540451
SGD 1.510158
SHP 0.892889
SLE 29.00886
SLL 24955.965041
SOS 680.257991
SRD 45.284203
STD 24632.829038
STN 24.405725
SVC 10.414682
SYP 13162.086558
SZL 18.89362
THB 37.47471
TJS 11.111392
TMT 4.177278
TND 3.419932
TOP 2.865494
TRY 51.769455
TTD 8.081781
TWD 37.504815
TZS 3064.528011
UAH 51.016503
UGX 4255.561501
USD 1.190108
UYU 46.191183
UZS 14551.667152
VES 436.587186
VND 30871.396828
VUV 142.347093
WST 3.230425
XAF 653.416494
XAG 0.011999
XAU 0.000238
XCD 3.216326
XCG 2.145213
XDR 0.814683
XOF 653.427432
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.71971
ZAR 19.020916
ZMK 10712.396649
ZMW 23.359765
ZWL 383.214232
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • CMSC

    0.0050

    23.7

    +0.02%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    79.4

    -0.97%

  • BTI

    -0.0750

    60.135

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.6000

    35.565

    -1.69%

  • NGG

    -0.6800

    84.37

    -0.81%

  • GSK

    0.6850

    51.34

    +1.33%

  • RIO

    -4.4050

    90.725

    -4.86%

  • JRI

    0.0420

    12.997

    +0.32%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    24.03

    -0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0450

    25.44

    -0.18%

  • VOD

    -0.0850

    14.625

    -0.58%

  • AZN

    0.6950

    93.285

    +0.75%

  • BP

    -0.4150

    37.625

    -1.1%

Climate change 'main threat' for world heritage sites
Climate change 'main threat' for world heritage sites / Photo: ASIF HASSAN - AFP/File

Climate change 'main threat' for world heritage sites

One of the world's first cities came close to being wiped off the map during tragic floods this summer in Pakistan. Though Mohenjo Daro survived, it has become a symbol of the threat global warming poses to humanity's cultural heritage.

Text size:

Built in around 3000 BC by the Indus civilisation in modern-day South Asia, Mohenjo Daro was not swept away by the floods, most likely thanks to the genius of its designers.

Perched high above the Indus river, the city was equipped with a primitive drainage system and sewers, meaning much of the floodwaters could be evacuated.

Nearly 1,600 Pakistanis died in the floods and 33 million others were affected in a disaster "probably" made worse by global warming, according to World Weather Attribution, a network of researchers.

The ancient metropolis "could have disappeared with all the archaeological traces" it contains, said Lazare Eloundou Assamo, the director of the World Heritage programme at UN agency UNESCO.

The Pakistani site was "a victim" of climate change and was "very lucky" to still be around, exactly 100 years since it was first discovered in 1922, Assamo said.

Fortunately, "the situation is not catastrophic" in Mohenjo Daro, said Thierry Joffroy, a specialist in brick architecture who visited the site on behalf of UNESCO.

Despite ground sinking in some areas and water damage to some structures, the site "can be repaired," Joffroy said.

- 'Huge impact' -

For 50 years, Paris-based UNESCO has compiled a list of World Heritage sites, significant places that are deemed worthy of protection, and is marking the milestone this week in Greece.

"To protect this heritage ourselves... is to confront the consequences of climate disruption and the loss of biodiversity. It's the main threat... that we assess in a tangible way," UNESCO director Audrey Azoulay told the conference in Delphi on Thursday.

Of its 1,154 World Heritage sites, "one site in five, and more than a third of natural sites, already see this threat as a reality," she said.

"We are experiencing many more incidents of floods, hurricanes, cyclones, typhoons," said Rohit Jigyasu of the International Center for the Study of the Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Property (ICCROM).

"We have these climate-related disasters, which are having a huge impact on sites, for example Mohenjo Daro," he said.

Huge forest fires have scorched the Rocky Mountains in Canada, which are a world heritage site, and this year flames came within 15 kilometres (nine miles) of Delphi as heatwave intensify the severity of wildfires across the Mediterranean basin.

In Peru, meanwhile, landslides occurred this year at the foot of Machu Picchu in the Andes mountains.

Other less noticeable changes can also have serious consequences.

In Australia, the protected Great Barrier Reef is experiencing bleaching episodes due to rising water temperatures.

In Ghana, erosion has washed away part of Fort Prinzenstein, which is conserved as a notable slave trading post.

- Termites and drought -

"Slow factors" that do not have an immediate impact pose "new kinds of risks in many of these sites," Jigyasu said.

These include invasions of wood-eating termites in areas that were previously either too dry or too cold for the insects to thrive.

In other countries, the drying out of soil due to declining rainfall can have a "destabilising" effect on some heritage sites, said Aline Magnien, director of the French state-funded Laboratory for Research on Historical Monuments.

Under drought conditions, "the soils contract and... make the foundations move", then "swell suddenly when it rains", which causes cracking, she said.

When parched and hard, they absorb less water, which promotes flooding.

"We may have certain heritage sites that we will not be able to save, that we will not be able to transmit, which will perhaps be doomed to disappear", said Ann Bourges, a researcher from the French culture ministry.

"It's not just the heritage that is affected when you lose part of it, but all the social system around it," added Bourges, who is also secretary general of the International Council of Monuments and Sites (Icomos), an NGO.

In Mongolia, archaeological sites have been abandoned then looted because "the population no longer had access to water", Jigyasu added.

Expected water shortages in the future could also lead to an increase of conflicts in which important heritage sites might be lost.

X.Wong--DT