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Scientists identify 64,000 sq miles of coral reef capable of surviving climate crisis

By Thomson Reuters Jun 16, 2026 | 12:59 AM

SINGAPORE, June 16 (Reuters) – Scientists have identified nearly 166,000 sq km (64,000 sq miles) of coral reefs that are capable of surviving and recovering from climate change, three times more ​than previously estimated, research showed on Tuesday.

The world’s coral reefs, ‌which sustain a quarter of all marine life, have come under severe stress as a result of violent tropical storms, pollution and mass “bleaching” events caused by soaring ocean temperatures, with some scientists warning that they are facing irreversible decline.

But ‌an ​analysis of 45,000 coral surveys together with decades ⁠of climate and ocean ⁠data has identified climate-resilient reefs across 71 countries and 100 territories, including in parts of the Caribbean and the Pacific and Atlantic oceans that have not previously been recognised.

“Coral reefs are often ​framed as ecosystems beyond saving,” said Emily Darling, director of coral conservation at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and one of the ⁠report’s authors.

“This research shows otherwise: we know ⁠where the hope is and what we need now ​is political will.”

Countries are currently drawing up action plans aimed at ​bringing 30% of their land and marine environments under formal ‌protection by the end of the decade, a target known as “30 by 30”, and the new research will enable governments to consider the location of coral reefs in their planning.

“Only 28% of the reefs ⁠currently fall within protected and conserved areas, so the opportunity is clear, and so is the urgency, especially as we face an upcoming super El ⁠Nino event,” Darling ‌said at a briefing.

Stacy Jupiter, co-author and executive ⁠director of the WCS’s Global Marine Program, said ​the data ‌could give governments the information required to decide ​where limited ⁠funds are deployed and give the more resilient reefs the best possible chance of surviving.

“In certain cases, where reefs are below certain benchmarks for ecosystem function, it may be a case of triage, where we may need to leave those places,” she said.

(Reporting by David Stanway; Editing ​by Lincoln Feast.)