15/06/2016

YourVote: Great Barrier Reef Should Be Prioritised Over Coal Mining, Survey Shows

Fairfax

A thumping majority of Australians want the health of the Great Barrier Reef prioritised over coal mining, according to a survey of more than 63,000 Fairfax Media readers.
People living in mining states, the lower-educated, older people and men were less likely to agree to such a trade-off.
Queensland's Abbot Point, surrounded by wetlands and coral reefs, is set to become the worlds largest coal port.
Queensland's Abbot Point, surrounded by wetlands and coral reefs, is set to become the worlds largest coal port.

However the result suggests neither major party has fully grasped the strength of public sentiment for protecting the natural wonder, which is suffering from declining water quality, and record coral bleaching largely caused by warming oceans.
An analysis of Fairfax Media's YourVote tool, which gauges respondents' beliefs to determine their political leanings, shows about 49,900 respondents – or 79 per cent - "strongly agree" or "agree" that the health of the Great Barrier Reef should be prioritised over coal mining.
Conservationists say the coal industry affects the reef because Queensland projects require port infrastructure, including dredging near the reef, and coal must be shipped through the sensitive marine environment. They also say coal burning more generally contributes to global warming, and subsequent coral bleaching.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and his wife Lucy on board the sealink off Magnetic Island near Townsville.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and his wife Lucy on board the sealink off Magnetic Island near Townsville. Photo: Andrew Meares
Support for protecting the reef over mining was stronger among women (84 per cent) than men (77 per cent).
Such sentiment was lowest in states and territories where mining is a large part of the economy: Queensland (73 per cent), the Northern Territory (75 per cent) and Western Australia (76 per cent).
Those who did not finish high school or undertake further education were also less likely to want the reef's health prioritised over coal mining than those with vocational training or university qualifications.
Labor leader Bill Shorten on a visit to Green Island, off Cairns.
Labor leader Bill Shorten on a visit to Green Island, off Cairns. Photo: Jason Edwards

A slightly smaller proportion of respondents aged 65 or over were likely to agree with the proposition, while it had highest support among those aged 18-34.
University of Sydney professor Ariadne Vromen, a political sociologist who is advising Fairfax Media on the YourVote project, said the results suggested that neither major party were as committed as respondents were to prioritising the reef over coal, adding "this is actually a really important issue that most Australians agree on".
"The Great Barrier Reef has world heritage status and Australians clearly appreciate what that means," she said.
Both major parties have made significant pre-election pledges to help protect the reef. However critics including the Greens have called for more drastic measures, including blocking new or expanded coal and gas mines such as Adani's proposed Carmichael mine in central Queensland.

Slime blankets coral reef. The effects of coral bleaching include the formation of an insidious layer of slime, now coating a vast area of the Great Barrier Reef, scientists say.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Saturday defended the government's stance on cutting harmful greenhouse gas emissions, insisting "heroic efforts by one country … are futile" and nations must act "in a co-ordinated way".
But Australian National University professor Howard Bamsey, a former government negotiator in global climate action, said this rhetoric ignored the economic opportunities created by boldly cutting emissions.
That positive paradigm was "the biggest change in global climate policy in the last seven or eight years", he said.
"Acting unilaterally, providing you have chosen which direction and actions wisely, can make sense for the economy," Professor Bamsey said.
An international effort based on unilateral action would create "a new climate economy" driven by competition. Australia's dependency on emissions-intensive industries meant "we have more to gain in making sure we are not left behind," he said.

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