Extract from The Guardian
Scientist who features in BBC series says
Australia’s positions on reef and coal are incompatible, but
environment minister Greg Hunt fails to address contradiction at
Paris screening
David Attenborough’s BBC series on the Great
Barrier Reef has prompted awkward questions about coalmining for
Australia’s environment minister, Greg Hunt. Photograph: Freddie
Claire/BBC/Atlantic Productions/Freddie Claire
Lenore
Taylor in Paris
Thursday 10 December 2015 06.59 AEDT
A leading scientist who features in David
Attenborough’s new series about the Great
Barrier Reef has told the Australian government it cannot expand
coal exports and continue to claim to be protecting the reef.
The government is planning a big tourism campaign
to run at the same time as the new series screens around the world.
Biologist Ove
Hoegh-Guldberg made the remarks to Guardian Australia as Tourism
Australia “clarified” the purpose of its $1.5m in funding for the
BBC project. It retracted public statements that the money was a
no-strings contribution to the production of the three-part series
and said it had now been informed the funds were used for a
subsequent educational campaign.
Hoegh-Guldberg compered a panel discussion with
Sir David, Sir Richard Branson, explorer and marine biologist Sylvia
Earle and the director general of WWF-International Marco Lambertini
at La Maison des Oceans in Paris on Saturday ahead of a special
screening of the first episode of the series.
Australia’s environment minister Greg
Hunt firmly requested – some said demanded – a chance to
speak after the screening because of Australia’s financial
contribution to the series, sources told Guardian Australia.
Hoegh-Guldberg, a professor and director of the
Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland, cut off a
question to the panel about the incompatibility of approving Adani’s
$16bn proposed coalmine in Queensland and protecting the reef, saying
the minister would answer it in his remarks after the screening. Hunt
did not address the question, but in answer to a similar question
earlier at the Paris conference claimed rejecting the mine would have
amounted to “neo-colonialism” by Australia. He did mention
Australia’s $140m “reef trust” to combat soil erosion, crown of
thorns starfish and other threats.
In an interview with Guardian Australia,
Hoegh-Guldberg said in his opinion opening the coalmine was
incompatible with limiting global warming to 2C, or 1.5C in the
longer term, goals considered necessary for the future of the reef.
“There’s a disjunct between the agreement that
we have to keep global warming below 2 degrees, and 1.5 degrees in
the longer term, necessary for the healthy future of the reef, and
opening the world’s largest coalmine. Anyone would see that as
strange and the government needs to face the fact that expanding our
coal and gas exports is not consistent with the imperative of keeping
80% of fossil fuel reserves in the ground. We need to resolve that as
a government and as a nation,” he said. “We can’t have it both
ways.”
A spokesman for Tourism Australia told Guardian
Australia on Tuesday it had invested $1.5m to assist in the
production of the series because it complemented a new campaign
featuring Australia’s “aquatic and coastal experiences”.
He said Tourism Australia had no involvement in
the editorial decision-making or script, but had taken “the
opportunity to invest in a series with global reach that will shine a
light on the Great Barrier Reef, one of the most popular attractions
in Australia”.
“The timing could not be better for us because
our new tourism campaign is all about aquatic and coastal
experiences,” he said.
But Atlantic Productions, the company that made
the series, said Tourism Australia was wrong.
“No Australian government funding went into the
production of the BBC television series. Separately, Tourism
Australia is assisting in the production of an educational IMAX 3D
film about the Great Barrier Reef to be launched in 2017, with
various outreach and educational projects which will also be launched
later,” a spokeswoman said.
“Neither Tourism Australia nor the Australian
government had any input in or editorial control over the series”
which had been “made under the normal strict editorial guidelines
governing a BBC project,” she said.
Tourism Australia’s executive general manager of
corporate affairs, Karen Halbert, then contacted Guardian Australia
to say Atlantic Productions had “asked that we clarify our position
with Atlantic on this project”.
“Tourism Australia funded part of a
multi-platform media project (which includes an IMAX 3D film as well
as various outreach and educational projects) between Atlantic
Productions and Tourism Australia aimed at inspiring greater interest
in the world’s largest coral reef system. We have been informed by
Atlantic Productions that our investment has not been allocated into
the production of the BBC television series,” she said.
At the Paris screening, Hoegh-Guldberg asked Sir
David what would happen if world leaders did not agree to limit
warming to 1.5C because of the cost.
“The expense of not doing it is gigantic,” the
filmmaker said.
“Seventy per cent of all fish species are
dependent on the coral reef at some stage in their lives. If we were
to lose coral reefs, the biological and ecological destruction of
life in the ocean would be enormous and for those people who live on
the coast and depend on fish for their food it would be a major
loss.”
Queensland’s environment minister, Steven Miles,
has
also said that “the greatest long-term threat to the Great
Barrier Reef is climate change. If we are serious about protecting
the Great Barrier Reef, we need the Australian government to stand up
and do our bit to reduce carbon pollution and imit global warming.”
The Australian government has backed the 1.5C goal
in the new climate agreement, but its national greenhouse gas
reduction target has been branded as “inadequate”.
Climate change is addressed in the third episode
of the BBC series, dealing with threats to the reef. Australia
House in London recently hosted celebrities including the Duke of
Edinburgh and chef Heston Blumenthal to a special screening of the
episode.
Conservation
groups have asked the federal court to overturn Hunt’s approval
of Adani’s Carmichael mine because he did not take into account the
impact on the reef of the greenhouse gases emitted when the coal is
burned.
A
recent report found the coal from the mine would create annual
emissions similar to those from countries such as Malaysia and
Austria, and more than New York City.
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