Kashmir Observer

Immediate focus on recovery is understand­able. But the lack of a long-term environmen­tal vision is damaging to both the industry and the planet.

- SUSANNE BECKEN We can’t return to normal A job half done Bouncing back differentl­y By Arrangemen­t with The Conversati­on

With each passing day, the grave future of Earth becomes more stark. The disruption of COVID-19 has not been enough to shift the trajectory, nor has it prompted polluting sectors of the economy to reconsider the harms they inflict on the planet.

Nowhere is this clearer than in the global tourism sector. Before COVID-19, internatio­nal aviation emissions - already a major contributo­r to global warming - were forecast to potentiall­y triple between 2015 and 2050. Likewise, emissions from the cruise ship industry were also growing.

The pandemic itself can be traced back to humanity’s relentless damage to nature. And mass global tourism is emblematic of this voracious, growthat-all-costs mentality.

Tourism brings many economic, social and cultural benefits. But it’s time the industry seriously reconsider­s its business model, and overall purpose, in a post-pandemic world.

The United Nations is among many voices urging the global tourism industry to address its many sustainabi­lity challenges in the wake of COVID-19.

The UN says it recognises tourism’s important role in providing incomes for millions of people. But in a recent policy brief, it said now is the time to “rethink how the sector impacts our natural resources and ecosystems”.

Unfortunat­ely, there’s little evidence that global tourism is looking to transform. For example, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n is clearly seeking to return to the “old normal”. Its resources guide to support airlines during the pandemic and beyond examines ways to restart the industry, but makes no mention of environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

Similarly, the World Travel and Tourism Council’s 100 Million Jobs Recovery Plan calls on nations to remove barriers to travel, saying traveller confidence is “critical to the sector’s survival and recovery”. Sustainabi­lity rates only a passing a mention.

The industry’s immediate focus on recovery is understand­able. But the lack of a long-term environmen­tal vision is damaging to both the industry and the planet.

Pre-COVID-19, the global tourism and travel industry had begun to address some sustainabi­lity challenges.

For example, internatio­nal aviation is seeking to improve global fuel efficiency by 2% each year until 2050. But this target is “aspiration­al” and even the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Authority has conceded it was “unlikely to deliver the level of reduction necessary to stabilize and then reduce aviation’s absolute emissions contributi­on to climate change”.

Current technologi­cal constraint­s mean decarbonis­ing aviation is challengin­g. An expected future increase in flight demand will only add to the problem. Globally, 7.8 billion passengers are expected to travel in 2036.

What’s more, tourism’s damage to the environmen­t extends far beyond climate change. It adds to marine plastic pollution, degrades habitat and leads to a loss of wilderness and natural quiet. The industry’s resurgence must address these and other harms.

People travelling outside their normal context are open to new experience­s and perspectiv­es. In this way, tourism presents an opportunit­y to encourage a new connection with nature.

So what should the future of tourism look like? I and others are advocating for a more sustainabl­e tourism sector that’s vastly different to what exists now. Travel should be closer to home, slower, and with a positive contributi­on at its core. In this model, all erosion of natural, cultural and social capital ceases.

Practices under the model (some of which already exist at a small scale) might include:

• more travel to regional and local destinatio­ns, involving shorter distances. Under COVID-19, the trend towards such tourism has already begun. However, communitie­s must be empowered to determine what type of tourism they want. travellers paying a conservati­onfocused levy upon entering a country, such as those imposed in New Zealand and Botswana. the donation of time, money or expertise to support environmen­tal

a frequent flyer levy incentives for domestic tourism restrictio­ns on flight advertisin­g no more airport expansions in highincome countries better transport alternativ­es aviation. to

The above vision for tourism involves great changes. The industry’s focus must shift from growth and profit to “regenerati­on” – helping to restore the natural world that humans have so badly damaged.

And the transition must happen gradually, to allow tourism-dependent economies and businesses to adjust.

The global tourism industry will persist after COVID-19. But it must be reimagined as, first and foremost, a public good rather than a commercial activity.

And the goal of ecosystem restoratio­n must be at the industry’s core. Planetary health is inextricab­ly linked to our own well-being – and that of the tourism industry. After all, there’s no tourism on a dead planet.

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A vision for the future

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