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PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: TRAVEL

Ecotourism bad for environment?

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by DOUG MELLGREN

OSLO, Norway (16 May 2007) -- Ecotourism may be just as environmentally damaging as traditional travel due to the greenhouse gases vacationers are burning to reach remote and pristine areas, say industry experts.

That dilemma has been the focus of the Global Ecotourism Conference in Oslo, a three-day gathering of ecotourism officials this week who are struggling to chart the future of an industry whose success threatens to become its own undoing.

"There is no other industry that has more to gain or to lose from climate change," said Alexi Huntley, whose tiny Costa Rican airline Nature Air claims to be the first with zero net carbon dioxide emissions.

Ecotourism — a form of travel to pristine areas such as natural parks or exotic islands meant to avoid the damaging impact of traditional tourism — is growing at around three times the rate of the tourism industry as a whole, according to The International Ecotourism Society, one of the sponsors of the conference.

Yet the extensive travel often required to reach untouched natural wonders produces climate-damaging greenhouses gases and other environmental damage. That, in turn, could potentially dry out the lush national parks and flood the small, exotic islands that are drawing the environmentally minded.

"It's the Catch-22 of nature-based tourism," Huntley said.

The roughly 300 delegates were planning to adopt a roadmap for the industry which will stress the need to focus on sustainable tourism.

"Long distance travel — especially air travel — is a challenge to all of us. We know that it has serious impacts on the climate," said Norwegian Environment Minister Helen Bjoernoey, opening the meeting on Monday.

"The tourist industry should give priority to developing ecotourism in markets closer to home and to promoting environmentally friendly forms of transport."

 

global warming - airplane
Air travel is a major contributor to global warming.

According to The International Ecotourism Society, nature-based tourism has been growing at a rate of more than 20 percent a year since the early 1990s, and is probably growing at three times the rate of the tourism industry as a whole.

Tourism to exotic destinations requires extensive travel, such as long flights and long drives, that scientists say emit climate-warming gases.

Wolfgang Strasdas, a professor of ecotourism at the German University of Applied Sciences, said it might seem simplest to just cut out those trips, but that would be disastrous for poor regions and countries that are economically dependent on such tourism.

The conference was sponsored by the ecotourism society, the United Nations Environment Program, as well as Norwegian and international travel, conservation and environment groups.

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