Coral bleaching may cost $1 billion a year

The Climate Council says mass coral bleaching is now moving into central parts of the Great Barrier Reef popular with tourists.

barrier reef

File image of researchers surveying the reef between Mackay and Townsville. Source: ARC Center of Excellence

Mass coral bleaching is spreading into the most popular parts of the Great Barrier Reef and could cost the region one million visitors per year, meaning a loss of at least $1 billion and 10,000 jobs.

That's according to the Climate Council's latest report, released in Brisbane on Wednesday, which warns climate change is pushing up sea surface temperatures and driving extensive and ongoing mass coral bleaching.

Climate Councillor professor Lesley Hughes said a global bleaching event over recent years had, until now, crippled the "formerly pristine" northern areas of the reef.

"That bleaching we now know is continuing into 2017 with extremely warm water causing particularly severe bleaching now in the middle sections of the reef, which of course is where most of the tourists visit," she said.

"This will have enormous economic and employment consequences for Queensland."

While the report noted cooler water brought on by Cyclone Debbie could offer some reprieve, it also said this may be offset by physical damage inflicted by the extreme weather.

It comes just days after aerial surveys showed mass coral bleaching had impacted most of the Great Barrier Reef.

The Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies on Monday confirmed that only the southern third of the reef had not been affected by consecutive bleaching events in 2016 and 2017.

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority chairman Russell Reichelt said survey results would be used to "refine a support strategy" to help improve the health of the ecosystem.

The "extraordinary devastation" experienced on the reef was due to the warming of the oceans, driven by the burning of coal, oil and gas, Prof Hughes said ahead of the report's release.

"It would have been virtually impossible for this to have occurred without climate change," she said.

The loss of coral reefs across the globe could cost $1 trillion, the council says, stressing it's an economic as well as an ecological problem.

The World Heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef is worth $7 billion annually and supports the livelihoods of 69,000 Australians employed in sectors such as tourism, the report states.


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