The Japan Times - Climate change 'main threat' for world heritage sites

EUR -
AED 3.769571
AFN 78.736979
ALL 100.13672
AMD 416.842832
ANG 1.878757
AOA 467.985549
ARS 1090.772752
AUD 1.669096
AWG 1.849876
AZN 1.748358
BAM 1.964958
BBD 2.10481
BDT 127.122496
BGN 1.936989
BHD 0.393032
BIF 3085.681829
BMD 1.026283
BND 1.414694
BOB 7.203575
BRL 5.995539
BSD 1.042459
BTN 90.251647
BWP 14.519674
BYN 3.4115
BYR 20115.153247
BZD 2.09396
CAD 1.508539
CDF 2927.986274
CHF 0.938983
CLF 0.037253
CLP 1027.931008
CNY 7.375691
CNH 7.548017
COP 4329.880825
CRC 525.8509
CUC 1.026283
CUP 27.196508
CVE 110.781333
CZK 25.19972
DJF 185.635214
DKK 7.4615
DOP 64.400158
DZD 140.841438
EGP 52.045887
ERN 15.39425
ETB 133.533878
FJD 2.384005
FKP 0.845234
GBP 0.834153
GEL 2.935357
GGP 0.845234
GHS 15.949337
GIP 0.845234
GMD 74.407972
GNF 9010.998705
GTQ 8.063583
GYD 218.09651
HKD 8.000299
HNL 26.555772
HRK 7.573507
HTG 136.35553
HUF 409.163739
IDR 16785.120416
ILS 3.698422
IMP 0.845234
INR 88.836624
IQD 1365.564661
IRR 43206.527901
ISK 145.280721
JEP 0.845234
JMD 164.406269
JOD 0.727842
JPY 159.625016
KES 134.476773
KGS 89.748526
KHR 4194.550072
KMF 485.27817
KPW 923.65511
KRW 1496.095333
KWD 0.316588
KYD 0.868749
KZT 540.177675
LAK 22679.706185
LBP 93351.093287
LKR 310.657923
LRD 207.446874
LSL 19.45799
LTL 3.030348
LVL 0.620788
LYD 5.117853
MAD 10.46387
MDL 19.462712
MGA 4847.593796
MKD 61.818124
MMK 3333.328219
MNT 3487.310862
MOP 8.367901
MRU 41.760639
MUR 47.876372
MVR 15.815301
MWK 1807.625027
MXN 21.716237
MYR 4.572061
MZN 65.589802
NAD 19.45799
NGN 1542.503956
NIO 38.358784
NOK 11.747152
NPR 144.403038
NZD 1.84095
OMR 0.395103
PAB 1.042459
PEN 3.877975
PGK 4.244784
PHP 59.9565
PKR 290.764302
PLN 4.225126
PYG 8222.322823
QAR 3.799911
RON 4.91252
RSD 117.678479
RUB 102.282554
RWF 1479.69661
SAR 3.849284
SBD 8.675881
SCR 14.931594
SDG 616.796557
SEK 11.516469
SGD 1.403817
SHP 0.845234
SLE 23.476244
SLL 21520.648185
SOS 595.776813
SRD 36.022035
STD 21241.992851
SVC 9.121514
SYP 13343.735828
SZL 19.445633
THB 34.92438
TJS 11.399129
TMT 3.602254
TND 3.329518
TOP 2.403658
TRY 36.855897
TTD 7.070957
TWD 33.810902
TZS 2658.18936
UAH 43.47503
UGX 3837.88773
USD 1.026283
UYU 45.110251
UZS 13526.042543
VES 59.904774
VND 25739.18589
VUV 121.842418
WST 2.874442
XAF 659.028618
XAG 0.032957
XAU 0.000367
XCD 2.773582
XDR 0.796914
XOF 659.028618
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.416252
ZAR 19.454417
ZMK 9237.776937
ZMW 29.162923
ZWL 330.462813
  • CMSD

    -0.3800

    23.84

    -1.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.47

    -0.89%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    61.4

    -0.55%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    49.89

    -0.92%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.48

    -1.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.54

    -0.82%

  • RIO

    -0.5000

    60.41

    -0.83%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.43

    -0.81%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    35.27

    -0.26%

  • RBGPF

    67.2700

    67.27

    +100%

  • BCC

    -2.5000

    126.16

    -1.98%

  • AZN

    -0.4800

    70.76

    -0.68%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    39.64

    -0.1%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    31.06

    -1.77%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    23.79

    -0.46%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

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.

S.Fujimoto--JT