The Most Endangered UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and What You Can Do About It

As the World Heritage Convention celebrates 50 years, UNESCO looks at the challenges threatening its beloved World Heritage Sites.

Old City Jerusalem in a sunset haze

Jerusalem, which became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981, is on UNESCO’s in-danger list.

Photo by John Theodor/Shutterstock

The Taj Mahal, Cinque Terre, Yellowstone National Park—you’re bound to see some familiar places on the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage List. The list includes 1,154 natural and cultural sights of significance from 194 countries around the world that are considered to be of universal value and meet one of UNESCO’s 10 selection criteria (such as bearing unique testimony to a civilization or exemplifying significant ecological processes).

In mid-November, the international nonprofit convened in Delphi, Greece for a conference celebrating the 50th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention’s adoption, which created the concept of World Heritage Sites. The conference, titled “The Next 50: The future of World Heritage in challenging times enhancing resilience and sustainability”, focused on the Convention’s achievement and the challenges it faces in the 21st century—particularly that of climate change.

According to UNESCO, climate change has become the number one threat to natural World Heritage Sites. The organization states that climate change has already negatively impacted 34% of all sites. By 2100, UNESCO predicts that half of all World Heritage glaciers and all World Heritage coral reefs—including the Great Barrier Reef—could disappear because of the changing climate.

That’s not the only threat, however. In fact, UNESCO maintains a list of World Heritage Sites at risk.

The UNESCO World Heritage Sites Most in Danger

According to Article 11 of the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, places qualify for the in-danger list if they are faced with threats such as: disappearance due to rapid urban or tourist development projects, land destruction, or the outbreak or the threat of an armed conflict. The full list now includes 52 World Heritage Sites.

Here are a few standouts that represent the diversity of risks that can put a spot on the watchlist. While UNESCO accepts general donations to protect its World Heritage Sites, plenty of the listed in-danger sites accept individual donations, too.

Old City of Jerusalem and its Walls

Jerusalem has major significance for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as the site of important events in each respective religion’s history. The ancient city became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981 and includes monuments such as the Wailing Wall, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and the Dome of the Rock.

A year after Jerusalem’s inscription, the city was added to the in-danger list due to a number of factors, including the deterioration of the city’s monuments and the impact of archaeological excavations.

Volcano in Virunga National Park surrounded by green land.

Virunga National Park is home to a number of diverse landforms, including volcanoes.

Photo by Marian Galovic/Shutterstock

Virunga National Park, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Donate: Virunga National Park

Virunga National Park, inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979 and located on the eastern section of the Congo Basin, is home to more than a thousand species (including a third of the world’s endangered mountain gorillas). Unfortunately, the park was added to UNESCO’s in-danger list in 1994 due to the effects of the Rwandan genocide. Following the outbreak of war in Rwanda, the surge in refugees to the Democratic Republic of the Congo led to increased deforestation and poaching at the site—which still threaten the national park today.

Of the 52 World Heritage Sites on the in-danger list, UNESCO reports almost half of them are located on the African continent.

Everglades National Park at sunrise with the silhouette of a flying heron

Everglades National Park is the only UNESCO World Heritage Site from the U.S. on the in-danger list.

Photo by Brian Lasenby/Shutterstock

Everglades National Park, United States

Donate: Everglades National Park

Florida’s Everglades National Park is the largest subtropical wilderness in the United States, and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1979. In 1993, the area was added to the in-danger list because of damage caused by Hurricane Andrew and then removed in 2007. However, the site was readded to the list in 2010 due to concerns over the deterioration of its aquatic ecosystem.

The break-down of its ecosystem has been attributed to factors like pollution, lower water levels from neighboring agricultural activities, a reduction of marine and estuarine biodiversity, and changes in water flow volume.

Upper Belvedere palace and gardens during the spring

You can see examples of Vienna’s Baroque architecture at the Belvedere.

Photo by Mistervlad/Shutterstock

Historic Centre of Vienna, Austria

Thanks to Vienna’s long history (which include its stint as the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and its modern-day reputation as Europe’s music capital), you can find evidence of the Middle Ages, the Baroque period, and the Gründerzeit era in the city’s streets.

The Historic Centre of Vienna was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2001 because of its preserved architectural wonders from these time periods, which include Baroque castles and its iconic ring road. In 2017, UNESCO put this site on the in-danger list due to new high-rise constructions that “impact adversely the outstanding universal value of the site.”

Adobe walls at archeological site Chan Chan in Trujillo, Peru

Chan Chan was put on UNESCO’s World Heritage List the same year it became a World Heritage Site.

Photo by Matyas Rehak/Shutterstock

Chan Chan Archaeological Zone, Peru

Chan Chan was the capital of the ancient Chimu Kingdom, a society that thrived for nearly 500 years before falling to the Incas in the 15th century. The archaeological zone—which covers nearly 5.5 square miles—spotlights part of what was once the largest earthen-architecture city in pre-Columbian America, and provides evidence of the kingdom’s industrial, agricultural, and water management systems.

In 1986 (the same year UNESCO put it on its World Heritage List), Chan Chan was added to the in-danger list because of its fragility: air and water can easily damage structures on the site. The organization reports that human activity, mainly in the form of illegal farming and infrastructure development, is also threatening the visual integrity of the property.

Chloe Arrojado is the associate editor of destinations at AFAR. She’s a big fan of cafés, dancing, and asking people on the street for restaurant recommendations.
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