Case for Saving Coral Reefs is Economic as Well as Conservational

Diver in Chagos. Photo credit: Mark Spalding

Destroying reefs via the ‘one-two’ of climate change and locally unregulated fishing will hit the economies of dozens of countries.

This piece originally appeared on The Guardian.

People around the world enjoy coral reefs as places of recreation and wonder. But few appreciate that reefs are also an economic pillar for many countries.

Take, for example, the Caribbean nation of Belize. A recent analysis by several of my colleagues concluded that the country’s coral reefs contribute the equivalent to 10 to 15 per cent of the nation’s GDP, primarily through tourism and fisheries. Likewise, the avoided damage to buildings and infrastructure that reefs provide by serving as a “speed bump” for tropical storms equates to the same GDP percentage.

Belize is not alone. At least 94 countries and territories benefit from the tourism, fisheries, and shoreline protection provided by reefs. In nearly two dozen of these, reef tourism accounts for more than 15 per cent of GDP. Coral reefs, it appears, are both natural wonders and economic foundations.

But reefs are at risk. In our new, comprehensive analysis, Reefs at Risk Revisited, the World Resources Institute and our partners found that about 75 per cent of the world’s coral reefs are under threat. The most immediate and direct pressures arise from local sources, with overfishing and destructive fishing techniques affecting about 55 per cent of the world’s reef area. Other local threats include coastal development, sediment run-off and pollution.

Coral reefs are also facing the threat of climate change. As sea temperatures rise, many corals bleach and die. Vast reef areas in south-east Asia are experiencing severe bleaching, weakening these fragile ecosystems. Furthermore, as carbon dioxide emissions from power plants and other sources increase globally, the oceans are becoming more acidic. Ocean acidification makes it difficult for reefs to build and maintain their complex skeletons – resulting in an “osteoporosis of the reef”.

By nature, coral reefs are resilient. They can bounce back from the effects of any one particular threat. But these local threats combined with climate change pose a devastating one-two from which many reefs may be unable to recover.

The state of the world’s reefs is not just an ecological crisis, but also an economic one. Industries such as tourism, real estate, insurance and fisheries all face daunting prospects as one of their economic pillars disintegrates. Economic ministers and chambers of commerce should be concerned and raise their voices in support of policies to save coral reefs.

Governments have taken extraordinary steps to salvage collapsing industries during the global economic meltdown. The United States, for instance, rescued its automotive manufacturing industry that accounts for about four per cent of its national GDP. With reefs underpinning a greater share of GDP for many countries, will governments now take similar extraordinary steps to protect them?

While reducing greenhouse gas emissions has to be a global, collective effort in order to be effective, individual nations have it within their power to reduce or even eliminate local threats to coral reefs.

Important steps include:

  • Adequately finance and sufficiently enforce existing marine protected areas

  • Create new marine protected areas or “fish banks” to reduce fishing pressure on coral reefs. Creating such no-fishing reserves can increase fish yields outside of the reserve, a boon for both conservationists and fishers

  • Eliminate destructive fishing practices such as dynamite and cyanide fishing

  • Enforce coastal development regulations such as building setbacks, sewage treatment, run-off controls, and retention of mangroves and seagrass

  • Prevent erosion from inland farms, and deforestation along rivers that lead to coasts where reefs grow

  • Reduce marine-based pollution from ships and offshore oil operations

  • Route shipping lanes away from coral reefs and prohibit ships from anchoring in or near reefs.

Through these and related actions, countries just might be able to rescue the reefs, and the economies, currently at risk.

  • Craig Hanson, Director, People & Ecosystems Program

    Craig is the Director of WRI’s People & Ecosystems Program. Craig is responsible for guiding the Program’s overall strategy, focus on results, financial development, and staff capacity.

    chanson@wri.org+1 (202) 729-7624

2 Comments

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How do you see the efforts

How do you see the efforts proposed by i.e. Tom Goreau placing steel grids on the reefs suplied with dc electricity generated by renewables such as wind, solar- or wave power to rebuild the reef - is it in your view a feasiable way ?

Craig, Just came back from a

Craig,

Just came back from a trip in one of the World busiest diving place (Koh Tao, Thailand). This Small Island (23km ²) is an excellent example of the point made in your article. With issues such as overfishing, uncontrolled diving capacity, water pollution due to sewage release directly on the water, this Island became in a bit less than a decade an Ideal-type of ‘unsustainable tourism management’.

After working in Colombia’s Archipelagos of San Andres for a year, I continue observing that the same patterns are experienced all over the world. Wherever the beauty of nature is reachable (bankable) by mass tourism, governments should intervene soon enough to prevent nature degradation. All the steps you stated are important to put in place and should go hand-in-hand with the education of locals and (very importantly) of tourists. Of course one size does not fit all cases….