Mercury (Hobart)

Let’ s re think travel plans

Our is land home is in a prime position to embrace regenerati­ve tourism

- AMANDA DUCKER amanda.ducker@news.com.au

THE term “eco-tourism” is so bastardise­d by greenwashi­ng that even spotting the word on a travel website makes me suspicious.

“Sustainabl­e” is getting a bit tired, too.

Beyond semantics, sustainabi­lity itself may be reaching the end of its natural life span.

Embracing a sustainabl­e ethos was a necessary phase in the nascent pill age and plunder windback, but it is time to moveon.

We need to shift into systemic change and transforma­tion if we are to effectivel­y address the climate crisis and its existentia­l challenges.

Tourism is one of the world’s fastest-growing industries and one of Tasmania’s biggest.

Its might means it must become part of the solution if it is not going to be part of the problem.

Global travel is an extremely powerful phenomenon that can be harnessed for common good or ill. Let’ s manage it for the betterment of the world.

COVID-19 has all but crushed tourism this year, including in Tasmania.

Border closures have highlighte­d our over-reliance on what is a wonderful but also immature industry in Tasmania whose exposure to external variables – as fickle as both fashion and the weather– make it inherently unreliable.

COVID-19 has brought airtravel emissions down, but the economic cost is devastatin­g. Let’s salvage something from that toll by making the most of this crisis.

We ignore this disruption at our peril. Our vulnerabil­ity is telling us to change our approach. Business as usual is not an option.

As management guru Peter Drucker says: “The greatest danger in times of turbulence is not the turbulence – it is to act with yesterday’ s logic .”

This long pause is a chance to look at tourism a new and reimagine its future on our island. Tourism is not just an activator, it is an influencer with astonishin­g reach.

Tasmania needs to move fast to position itself in the vanguard of the global regenerati­ve tourism movement.

This is our future. I sense meaningful resonance with Brand Tasmania’s evocative “quiet pursuit of the extraordin­ary” theme.

As a small community already geared to low-volume, high-yield nature-based tourism, we are already halfway there.

Becoming a card-carrying leader of regenerati­ve tourism will sharpen our focus and deline ate away forward.

A regenerati­ve tourism framework will put environmen­tal and community needs at the heart of decision-making. It’s a triple bottom-line mind sets hift.

It is a step ahead of sustainabl­e tourism in the sense that its goals are not to preserve a status quo byt weak ing existing systems to cause minimal harm.

Regenerati­ve tourism – as its name implies – is committed to renewal of natural systems, regional communitie­s and human hearts and souls.

It is about fixing things. Restoring them. It supports rebirth and flourishin­g.

Tasmania is perfectly placed to embrace conservati­on and restoratio­n as themed experience­s for travellers.

Imagine if we made more of the complex and cautionary Lake Pedder story to attract progressiv­e tourists here.

On Tuesday, former Greens leader Christine Milne will share a Zoom conversati­on with Dr Anita Wild of Wild Ecology on the findings of the ecological scoping study on the restoratio­n of Lake Ped der.

Whether you back the case for und am ming Ped der or conversely think there’ s no point trying to squeeze the toothpaste back into the tube, it’s an engaging conversati­on to be drawn into.

More and more, tourists want portals for deeper engagement with local communitie­s. The search for meaning and connection is on in ear nest through global roaming.

It is encouragin­g to see Tourism Tasmania, the Tourism Industry Council and regional tourism bodies open to exploring regenerati­ve tourism’s possibilit­ies.

At next week’s Tasmanian Tourism Conference in Hobart, independen­t tourism consultant Sarah Lebski will talk about why regenerati­ve tourism’ s moment has come.

“At its simplest, regenerati­ve tourism can be described as giving back more than you take,” Sarah said when we chatted this week.

That can take many forms, but however it happens on the ground, tourism must not dominate the landscape.

“Visitor destinatio­ns are also people’s homes,” Sarah said. “Tourism is seen by some as a highly extractive industry, using the resources that are part of other people’s lives in the places they choose to live.

“Regenerati­ve tourism is about balance. Everybody should benefit from tourism and that most importantl­y includes residents.

“It is putting the community at the heart of things.

“It takes more effort, listening and engagement, but if you agree with the idea that people are culture, and that communitie­s are where the dee pest tourism experience­s reside, it makes sense to take good care of those communitie­s .”

AT ITS SIMPLEST, REGENERATI­VE TOURISM CAN BE DESCRIBED AS GIVING BACK MORE THAN YOU TAKE

SARAH LEBSKI

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