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“Environmental Law and the Threats of Global Climate Change to Cultural Heritage Sites” Stefan Gruber Faculty of Law, University of Sydney Cultural heritage sites • Culture plays a significant role in the survival of all individual parts of populations as distinguishable elements of humankind • Heritage sites remind people of their cultural identities, pasts and traditions • Reminders of the human need to adapt to the environment • What is considered as valuable and as worthy of being preserved for future generations? Early impacts of climate change • First human settlements in the early stages of the Holocene interglacial, 8,000 BC • Warm period before Little Ice Age (ca. 1550-1850) • Impacts on viniculture and agriculture Deterioration of permafrost • Hastened soil erosion – – – – Ground starts to slump Land slides Coastal erosion No protection by sea ice Deterioration of permafrost 2 • Hastened decay of organic material – No protection by ice – BUT: the melting of ice sheets sometimes reveals archaeological treasures – Sites are exposed to humidity • Douglas Mawson’s hut at Cape Denison in the Antarctic Commonwealth Bay, 1911 and 1914 • Scott’s hut, Cape Evans, Antarctica; 1 kilometre away from the Barne Glacier and its fifty metres high terminal wall of ice Desertification • UNCCD, Art. 1(a): “land degradation in arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas resulting from various factors, including climatic variations and human activities” • Removal of a protective cover from fertile soil in dry zones • Sand dunes stabilised by vegetation • Increasing number of windstorms • Irreversible process Desertification 2 • Sand encroachments • Grinding effects of sandstorms • Sites are deserted by local population Ocean rise and floods • 85 % of Earth’s freshwater is frozen at the polar caps • 70% of the world population live in coastal areas • Coastal erosion • Floods in river deltas • Threat to groundwater, e.g. island communities in Southern Pacific region • Increasing number of heavy storms Cultural landscapes • Often very fragile ecosystems • Loss of local population – secure ecological stability – prevent soil erosion • Loss of cultural landscapes – Landscapes shaped by humans – Regional architecture – Ecosystems • Loss of intangible heritage UNFCCC • Prevention or adaptation? • Or both? • Mitigation and adaptation are no antipodes, but closely interlinked World Heritage Convention • The duty to identify a nation’s heritage and to maintain the integrity of its outstanding universal value • World Heritage and climate change • “[The State Party] will do all it can to this end, to the utmost of its own resources ...” • The Precautionary Principle • List of World Heritage in Danger – Monitoring through IUCN and ICOMOS – States Parties report on a regular basis Cultural heritage in arctic and alpine regions • Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty (Annex V) • Increased monitoring • Salvage operations Combating desertification • UNCCD • More guidance of local communities • Threats to dry areas – – – – Short-term economic aims Unsustainable land use Unsustainable water use Development pressure Combating desertification 2 • Efficient regulation only through a combined application of water law, land use law and construction law • Specific actions regarding heritage sites – Buffer zones – Existing sand encroachment must be removed continuously – Increased monitoring of remote sites Preventive measures against flooding • Embankments • Compulsory protection plans – UNESCO: Overtopping of Thames barrier would cause damage of GBP 30 billion and flood three World Heritage Sites – Hurricane Katrina caused damage of over USD 80 billion. The implementation of the protection plan would have cost USD 14 billion Protecting rural cultural landscapes • Land use regulations • prevention of further soil degradation • protection of water supplies • sustainable access to resources • minimising development pressure • • • • • Establishment of buffer zones Adaptation of agriculture to climate change Support for rural communities Protection of minorities Prevention of further urbanisation Conclusion • Law must be used in a holistic way to create a comprehensive system of legal instruments and enforcement mechanisms • Possible precautionary measures to potential threats must be examined as early as possible • Cultural heritage is a non-renewable resource!