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1 Environmental Sustainability and Tourism An uneasy relationship.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Environmental Sustainability and Tourism An uneasy relationship."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Environmental Sustainability and Tourism An uneasy relationship

2 2 Definition Environmental sustainability Sustainable Tourism Resource Paradox Environmentally Sustainable Tourism Sustainable Tourism Criteria Green Globe Programme Conclusions Contents

3 3...Environmental Sustainability “Long-term maintenance of ecosystem components and functions for future generations” (Entrix Consulting)...Tourism “The temporary movement of people to destinations outside their normal places of work and residence, the activities undertaken during their stay in those destinations, and the facilities created to cater to their needs” (Mathieson and Wall, 1982) How to define...

4 4 Effectively managing our natural resources so they are available for the use of future generations. UN Millenium Goal Discrepancy between public speaking and private deciding (EU) Top-down or bottom-up? Environmental Sustainablity

5 5 What operators can do: Energy, waste, and water efficient business practices Community involvement in decision making Identifying and managing the environmental effects associated with their activities Identifying opportunities to market a business as sustainable Identifying key partnerships Visitors: Making choices and taking actions to minimise the environmental impacts associated with their travels Sustainable Tourism? (New Zealand Tourism)

6 6 Resource paradox at intersection of tourism and environment Natural environment draws tourists and is part of tourist experience At same time nature is exploited to satisfy visitors‘ consumptive desires Consumption and production exist simultaneously Environmental consequences of tourist activity immediately evident Resource Paradox Miller (2003)

7 7 Environmentally Sustainable Tourism Developments......are zero carbon and ready for a ‘low-carbon economy’ where people see carbon as a valuable currency that is in short supply....protect and enhance local biodiversity....ensure that materials are responsibly sourced – where possible knowing their provenance from the bottom of the supply chain....protect water resources and water quality – abstracting less water from fresh supplies than is replaced naturally, and do not impact on the ability of local communities to meet their water needs....are zero waste – they do not send any waste to landfill. (Forum for the Future, 2008)

8 8 Environment –Purchasing policy –Consumable goods –Energy consumption –Water consumption –Greenhouse gas –Wastewater –Waste management plan –Harmful substances –Other pollutants –Wildlife species –Wildlife in captivity –Landscaping –Biodiversity conservation –Interactions with wildlife Sustainable Tourism Criteria

9 9 Green Globe Programme

10 10 Different definitions and worldviews Long-term balance between appropriate tourism use and overuse remains fundamental issue Tourism exploits and requires protection of environment at the same time = resource paradox Sustainability paradigm Consumer demand - make the right choice Lack of collective leadership towards sustainability First promising initiatives are on the way! Conclusion

11 11 “ Tourism is like any other industry, in that it can truly make a positive contribution to the environment and to communities but it can also be a negative element with respect to them“ (Jarkko Saalinen, 2006)

12 12 Entrix Consulting (www.entrix.com/resources/glossary.aspx). [Accessed 15 February 09].www.entrix.com/resources/glossary.aspx EC3 Global (www.ec3global.com). [Accessed 15 February 09].www.ec3global.com Hunter, C. (1997) Sustainable Tourism as an Adaptive Paradigm. Annals of Tourism Research, Vol. 24, No. 4, pp. 850-867. Mathieson, A. and Wall, G. (1982). Tourism. Economics, Physical and Social Impacts. Prentice Hall. McCool, S., Morsey, R., Nickerson, N. (2001). What should tourism sustain? The disconnect with industry perceptions of useful indicators. Journal of Travel Research. Vol. 40, pp. 124–131. Miller, G. (2003). Consumerism in sustainable tourism: a survey of UK consumers. Journal of Sustainable Tourism. Vol. 11, pp. 17–39. Mowforth, M. and Munt, I. (1996) Tourism and Sustainability - New Tourism in the Third World. London: Routledge Nelson New Zealand (www.nelsonnz.com/sustainable.tourism/). [Accessed 14 February 09].www.nelsonnz.com/sustainable.tourism/ Paradise Found (2008) Forum for the Future www.forumforthefuture.org.www.forumforthefuture.org Ruzza, C. (2000) Environmental Sustainability and Tourism in European Policy-Making. Innovation, Vol. 13, No. 3. Saalinen, J. (2006). Traditions of sustainability in tourism studies. Annals of Tourism Research, Vol. 33, No. 4, pp.1121-1140. Sharpley, R. (2000) Tourism and Sustainable Development: Explorin the Theoretical Divide. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, Vol. 8. Sustainable Tourism Criteria (www.sustainabletourismcriteria.org) [Accessed 14 February 09].www.sustainabletourismcriteria.org Tourism Authority NZ (www.tourism.net.nz/community/environmental_sustainability). [Accessed 14 February 09].www.tourism.net.nz/community/environmental_sustainability Williams, P.W. and Ponsford, I.F. (2009) Futures. Doi:10.1016/j.futures.2008.11.019. Worldbank (web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTOED/EXTENVIRONMENT) [Accessed 15 February 09].web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTOED/EXTENVIRONMENT References


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