We’re in the era of overtourism but there is a more sustainable way forward: Professor

February 7, 2019

Overtourism leads to overcrowding. What to do? Bans? Entrance fees? (Image by pierrelaurentdurantin via Pixabay cropped and enhanced by "GT".) https://pixabay.com/en/beach-world-sun-crowd-654641/
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Over­tour­ism can be fixed or mit­ig­ated by tak­ing more ser­i­ously the Sus­tain­able Devel­op­ment Goals, accord­ing to Regina Scheyvens of Mas­sey University.

If you live in a tour­ist des­tin­a­tion, you might dread the hol­i­day inva­sion. Like­wise, dis­gruntled tour­ists com­plain about crowded and pol­luted beaches, nation­al parks or attractions. 

Over­tour­ism is now a ser­i­ous issue in many parts of the world. A good vis­it­or exper­i­ence may not be a finite resource in the same way as oil, but many pop­u­lar des­tin­a­tions in Europe are reach­ing what could be termed “peak tourism”. 

Con­cerns have been raised from Ams­ter­dam to Dubrovnik about noise pol­lu­tion, crowded parks, pres­sure on pub­lic facil­it­ies and rising rents. And in what is depic­ted as a “glob­al battle” between trav­el­lers and loc­als, anti-tour­ism street marches have occurred in Bar­celona and Venice. 

Unsustainable tourism growth

Tucked away in a seem­ingly idyll­ic spot in the South Pacific, New Zea­l­and is not immune to such con­cerns, which is why Mas­sey Uni­ver­sity is host­ing the world’s first research con­fer­ence on tour­ism and the sus­tain­able devel­op­ment goals this month [Janu­ary 2019]. 

Between 2013 and 2018, inter­na­tion­al tour­ist arrivals in New Zea­l­and grew by 1.2 mil­lion to a total of 3.8 mil­lion. Dur­ing the 12 months to March last year, tour­ists spent almost $40 bil­lion, and the industry now provides one in every 12 jobs. 

Eco­nom­ists see this growth as very pos­it­ive for the country’s devel­op­ment, but many New Zeal­anders are ambi­val­ent: 39% have expressed con­cern over the neg­at­ive impacts of the growth in inter­na­tion­al vis­it­ors. The pres­sure on some des­tin­a­tions is par­tic­u­larly intense. For example, the 20,000 per­man­ent res­id­ents of the sum­mer and winter play­ground of Queen­stown play host to around three mil­lion vis­it­ors a year. 

Mean­while loc­al gov­ern­ment bod­ies lament the pres­sure on pub­lic infra­struc­ture and demands for waste dis­pos­al from free­dom campers. Con­tract­ors at four Cent­ral Otago free­dom camp­ing sites have struggled to clear 16 tonnes of rub­bish accu­mu­lated over the last two months.

A test case for con­cerns about the prom­ise versus the pit­falls of tour­ism is the case of cruise tour­ism in Akaroa Har­bour. The battle line lies between some busi­ness own­ers whose live­li­hoods depend on cruise tour­ists and loc­al res­id­ents who feel their beau­ti­ful har­bour and quaint town are marred by air and noise pol­lu­tion and con­ges­tion asso­ci­ated with hun­dreds of tour­ists drop­ping in on their town with each cruise.

In Aus­tralia, the Guin­ness World Record-cer­ti­fied whitest sand beach in the world — Hyams Beach — has turned away thou­sands of poten­tial vis­it­ors dur­ing the Christ­mas and New Year peri­od. There are only 110 per­man­ent res­id­ents and 400 park­ing spaces, but up to 5000 tour­ists want­ing to vis­it the beach each day dur­ing summer.

These exper­i­ences reflect the pres­sures and ten­sions tour­ism brings to many parts of the world, and the need for bet­ter ways of reg­u­lat­ing tour­ist activ­ity and cap­tur­ing the gains from tourism.

Australia's Hyams Beach with "the whitest sand in the world" has its own overcrowding issues during the summer holiday season. Image by Charliekay [CC BY-SA 4.0] via Wikimedia. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hyams_Beach_-_Jervis_Bay_Marine_Park.jpg
Aus­trali­a’s Hyams Beach with “the whitest sand in the world” has its own over­crowding issues dur­ing the sum­mer hol­i­day sea­son. Image by Charliekay [CC BY-SA 4.0] via Wiki­me­dia.

A more sustainable way forward

It is clear that most people do not wish to see an end to tour­ism. But they do want the industry to be far more sus­tain­able. While the term “sus­tain­able tour­ism” has long been cri­ti­cised for its lack of clout – and the way it can be seen as merely “sus­tain­ing tour­ism”, there is a way for­ward. We can look to the United Nations’ 17 sus­tain­able devel­op­ment goals (SDGs), rat­i­fied in 2015 by 193 coun­tries and set to guide glob­al devel­op­ment through to 2030. 

The SDGs require gov­ern­ments, civil soci­ety and busi­ness interests to play their parts in cre­at­ing a more sus­tain­able world. Fur­ther­more, they are multi-faceted, con­sid­er­ing social, eco­nom­ic and envir­on­ment­al aspects of sustainability.

The SDGs can help to guide the tour­ism industry to make more sus­tain­able choices. For example, a strategy by hotels, cruise ships and res­taur­ants to buy as much fresh pro­duce from loc­al farm­ers as pos­sible would shorten the sup­ply chain and save food miles (thus con­trib­ut­ing to SDG 13 on com­bat­ing cli­mate change). It would also enhance loc­al devel­op­ment (SDG 1 on elim­in­at­ing poverty). 

Tour­ist resorts in the Pacific could tackle the sexu­al har­rass­ment from guests that many resort employ­ees exper­i­ence to show they care about SDG 8 on “decent work for all” and SDG 5 on “empower­ing all women and girls”. 

Tour­ism trades in lux­ury products and indul­gent exper­i­ences, and as such it places a heavy bur­den on the nat­ur­al envir­on­ment and res­ults in waste man­age­ment issues. SDG 12 on sus­tain­able pro­duc­tion and con­sump­tion can encour­age com­pan­ies to offer tour­ists more sus­tain­able products and to reduce wastage of energy, fresh water and food. 

Efforts to cap­ture the bene­fits of tour­ism while pre­vent­ing over­tour­ism should pay care­ful atten­tion to the SDGs.

This art­icle by Regina Scheyvens, Pro­fess­or of Devel­op­ment Stud­ies, Mas­sey Uni­ver­sity, was ori­gin­ally pub­lished on The Con­ver­sa­tion, Janu­ary 16, 2019. It has been repub­lished on the “GT” Blog under a Cre­at­ive Com­mons license. (The “GT” Blog used dif­fer­ent images.) Read the ori­gin­al art­icle.

Fea­tured image: Over­tour­ism leads to over­crowding, such as at this beach. What to do? Bans? Entrance fees? (Image by pier­re­laurent­dur­ant­in via Pixabay cropped and enhanced by “GT”.)

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