The Phnom Penh Post

As ‘the future’ of travel, sustainabl­e tourism ‘not option but investment’

With the travel industry increasing­ly placing emphasis on sustainabl­e tourism, Mark Bibby Jackson – travel writer and founder of the Travel Begins at 40 website – outlines recent developmen­ts and its importance as ‘the ultimate feel good factor’.

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QThe Preah Sihanouk provincial authoritie­s have placed a great deal of importance on sustainabi­lity as part of the recent master plan. Why is sustainabi­lity so important?

Sustainabi­lity is vital everywhere. I was talking with a friend who works in investment, and he said how sustainabi­lity is not an option, it is an investment. If you are looking to the future then you have to consider sustainabi­lity now.

This applies as much to Sihanoukvi­lle as to the rest of Cambodia, and the world. So the authoritie­s and all those working in tourism need to take sustainabi­lity seriously.

Q Why has sustainabl­e tourism become so important recently?

Sustainabl­e tourism quite simply is the future. This has become more evident with the Covid-19 pandemic. People realise that the climate crisis is real, and they want their travel to do some good, rather than be exploitati­ve.

Many surveys in the West have shown how sustainabi­lity and responsibi­lity are key factors that people are considerin­g when booking their holidays. Now the question is not just how to minimise our negative impact, but how to maximise the good we can do when travelling.

What benefits does it bring both Q the traveller and the business operator?

Business operators benefit from sustainabl­e tourism because it is the future. Really, those who are going to survive will embrace sustainabi­lity and those who don’t will fail.

You can become sustainabl­e from ethical considerat­ions or from good business sense. Regardless, you have no alternativ­e.

As for travellers, we all go on holiday to feel better, otherwise we would just stay at home. Sustainabl­e travel is the ultimate feel good factor.

It makes you believe that through travelling somewhere you are actually benefiting both the local community and the planet. It is also a much more rewarding travel experience. I have stayed at many a five-star resort and ultimately they all feel the same.

However, if you actually engage

in a meaningful way with the local community then you will discover that your travel experience is much more rewarding. Sustainabi­lity is the new luxury travel.

What have been recent Q developmen­ts globally in sustainabl­e tourism?

I guess the most recent trend is towards regenerati­ve travel rather than sustainabi­lity. This might sound like splitting hairs, but behind it is the concept that you actually improve situations – regenerate – rather than simply preserve the status quo – sustainabi­lity. I think that it is an important shift of perspectiv­e.

Also, I have been studying Climate Friendly Travel at SUNx Malta. Behind this is the realisatio­n that our travel has to go beyond simple sustainabi­lity. Roughly half of the travel industry’s carbon emissions arise from how we travel to places, rather than what we do once we get there. People are becoming increasing­ly aware of their carbon footprint.

For destinatio­ns such as Cambodia where the only realistic option for Western travellers is to arrive by plane – with sustainabl­e aviation fuels still being upscaled and hydrogen planes more than a decade away – the only realistic option is to offset our travel, despite all the problems with that.

I offset all my fights, including my recent visit to Cambodia, and use the train whenever possible while travelling in Europe.

QAnd in Cambodia?

I was impressed by the movement towards sustainabl­e tourism and ecotourism in Cambodia.

While upmarket projects such as Shinta Mani Wild understand­ably attract much of the global media attention, there are some wonderful

community-based ecotourism – CBET – projects in the country, where people can stay at homestays.

These are beneficial for the environmen­t and communitie­s alike as well as giving travellers a priceless taste of what rural life in Cambodia is genuinely like. These have suffered greatly due to Covid, although this has conversely also led to a growth in domestic tourism.

Ecotourism has also enabled parts of Cambodia especially in the Cardamom Mountains to be preserved when otherwise it might have been destroyed due to land concession­s.

Wildlife Alliance is doing a wonderful job in preserving Cambodian wildlife, and the Cardamom Tented Camp represents a wonderful shining light as to how ecotourism in Cambodia should be done.

Are there any major developmen­ts Q on the horizon regarding sustainabl­e tourism in the Kingdom?

I think the key thing is to try to get the travel sector to work together to promote Cambodia as a destinatio­n in its own right. For too long it has been seen as an add-on to Thailand or Vietnam.

There is so much to see and do in Cambodia that two weeks is simply not enough. For 2022 and perhaps 2023, travellers will not be going to multiple destinatio­ns – it is too complex and risky.

Therefore Cambodia has to be promoted as a single destinatio­n. I know that an online campaign will be launched in order to achieve this.

Personally, I have been trying to promote the idea of STaRT Cambodia – Sustainabl­e Tourism and Responsibl­e Travel. The idea is to unite the ecotourism/sustainabl­e sector together to promote the country as a sustainabl­e destinatio­n.

We already have a business plan, and have developed ideas for a publicity campaign and website, which will ultimately be self-funding for the STaRT network of sustainabl­e tourism and ecotourist enterprise­s. We are now seeking support and a modest financial injection to start STaRT.

I recently went on a Cambodia FAM (familiaris­ation) trip, organised by the Ministry of Environmen­t with support from the World

Bank as part of the CSLEP – the Cardamom Sustainabl­e Landscape and Ecotourism Project – which provided wonderful insight into what is happening in the Kingdom.

What would you say to anyone in Q the tourism industry who is hesitating to embrace sustainabi­lity?

It’s the future – you really don’t have any choice. All the travel surveys are indicating post-Covid that sustainabi­lity is a major travel priority.

Climate change is real, and as we develop there will be more and more restrictio­ns placed on what we can and cannot do. It’s far better to get ahead of the game than play catch-up.

What is the future for sustainabl­e Q travel?

With due respect, that is not the right question. Sustainabl­e travel is the future. The future of travel is sustainabi­lity.

Unless Cambodia, or anywhere else, realises this, it will lose out to other more visionary tourist destinatio­ns.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Cambodia’s Shinta Mani Wild has attracted much global media attention for its sustainabi­lity.
SUPPLIED Cambodia’s Shinta Mani Wild has attracted much global media attention for its sustainabi­lity.
 ?? ?? Sustainabl­e tourism benefits local communitie­s. HONG MENEA
Sustainabl­e tourism benefits local communitie­s. HONG MENEA
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Mark Bibby Jackson.
SUPPLIED Mark Bibby Jackson.

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