UNESCO: Climate Change and World Heritage

World Heritage properties are affected by the impacts of climate change at present and in the future. Their continued preservation requires understanding these impacts to their Outstanding Universal Value and responding to them effectively.

World Heritage properties also harbour options for society to mitigate and adapt to climate change through the ecosystem benefits, such as water and climate regulation, that they provide and the carbon that is stored in World Heritage forest sites. Cultural heritage, on the other hand, can convey traditional knowledge that builds resilience for change to come and leads us to a more sustainable future.

World Heritage properties serve as climate change observatories to gather and share information on applied and tested monitoring, mitigation and adaptation practices. The global network of World Heritage also helps raise awareness on the impacts of climate change on human societies and cultural diversity, biodiversity and ecosystem services, and the world’s natural and cultural heritage. Tiếp tục đọc “UNESCO: Climate Change and World Heritage”

List of World Heritage Sites threatened by climate change

Report by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), and the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), 2016.

[TĐH: The ancient town of Hội An is on this list]

* Download full report

Complete list of locations

Explore in-depth case studies and snapshots of World Heritage sites at risk. Links go to the relevant sections of the full report (requires PDF download).

Africa

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We’re Covering Heritage Sites Threatened by Climate Change. The List Just Got Longer.

Kendra Pierre-Louis

By Kendra Pierre-Louis Oct. 16, 2018 New York Times

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Cedars grow sparsely in the mountains near Jaj, Lebanon.CreditJosh Haner/The New York Times
Children swim by moai statues off the coast of Easter Island.CreditJosh Haner/The New York Times

One of the cruelties of global warming is that it threatens humanity’s past as well as its future.

That was brought into sharp focus by a study issued Tuesday. It says that some of the most important ancient sites in the Mediterranean region — the Greek city of Ephesus, Istanbul’s historic districts, Venice’s canals — might not survive the era of climate change.

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