Study: Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is surviving climate change just fine

By Around the Web

Great Barrier Reef, Australia (Unsplash)
Great Barrier Reef, Australia (Unsplash)

(THE NEW AMERICAN) – The climate hysteria movement is replete with predictions of utter doom for various ecosystems on Earth owing to the scourge of man-made global warming, which has been re-branded “climate change.” But a new study shows that one of those ecosystems – Australia’s Great Barrier Reef – seems to be doing just fine despite dire warnings of its imminent demise.

The Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest coral reef system, stretching over 1,400 miles along Australia’s northeast coast off the state of Queensland. It encompasses an area over approximately 133,000 square miles of the Coral Sea in the South Pacific, and includes some 900 islands and more than 2,900 individual reefs.

For several years, climate alarmists have been claiming that the Great Barrier Reef, along with all the coral reef systems on the planet, is essentially doomed because of climate change.

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