Venice and its lagoon again escape inclusion on UNESCO list of heritage sites in danger

Tourists walk around St Mark's square in Venice, Italy, Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2023. The Italian city of Venice has been struggling to manage an onslaught of tourists in the budget travel era. The stakes for the fragile lagoon city are high this week as a UNESCO committee decides whether to insert Venice on its list of endangered sites. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

VENICE, Italy (AP) — Venice on Thursday again escaped the tarnish of UNESCO's list of world heritage sites in danger, drawing a victory cheer from the mayor but scorn from environmentalists and scientists alarmed by the impact of mass tourism and climate change on the storied lagoon city.

At a meeting in Saudi Arabia, member states disregarded expert findings that Venice's “outstanding universal value†was under “a growing and increasingly urgent threat.†Instead, they praised the city's conservation efforts, in particular a last-minute pilot project approved two days ago that will make Venice the first city to charge entry.

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