Weekend Herald

Closure of popular beach a sign of pressure on tourist resorts

As Philippine­s closes one of its top destinatio­ns, experts warn others may follow

- Amy Sawitta Lefevre Reuters

The six-month closure of the Philippine tourism island of Boracay for a revamp after the country’s President branded it a “cesspool” reflects the growing pressures on beach resorts across Southeast Asia as visitor numbers surge.

Tourism experts say the region’s infrastruc­ture is buckling under record visitor numbers, especially as more Chinese holiday abroad, and expect more drastic measures to come.

Airports have become chaotic, hotels are being thrown up hastily with little regard for safety and sanitation, tropical beaches are strewn with garbage and coral reefs are dying.

Thailand already has plans to shut its famous Maya Bay in the Phi Phi islands for four months this year, while an environmen­tal group is calling for urgent government action to tackle a “crisis” on the Indonesian tourist island of Bali.

“Many out-of-control destinatio­ns across Asia will need clean-ups,” said Brian King, associate dean of the School of Hotel and Tourism Management at Hong Kong Polytechni­c University. “These may come from government, or industry or from NGOdriven community action. The danger is that little happens until the crisis point is reached.” He added: “Boracay is not the first and won’t be the last closure.”

Airlines have already started to cut back flights to Boracay, which had 2 million visitors last year, with the largest foreign contingent­s coming from China and South Korea, ahead of its closure on April 26.

The Philippine­s, which had record visitor numbers last year after three years of double-digit growth, estimates the Boracay closure could reduce full-year GDP by 0.1 per cent.

It is also planning to inspect the beach resort of Puerto Galera, on the island of Mindoro, and is already looking at the resorts of El Nido and Coron, in Palawan province, where an influx of tourism and rapid developmen­t has put infrastruc­ture under strain.

But rival tourist hotspots around the region are not all rubbing their hands at the prospect of the extra revenue from the redirected tourist traffic.

Kanokkitti­ka Kritwutiko­n, the head of the Tourism Authority of Thailand’s Phuket office, said the island was at “stretching point”, particular­ly its airport, which has undergone a number of upgrades in recent years to try to cope with overcapaci­ty.

“Our policy is to try to spread tourism around” from Phuket to “secondary destinatio­ns that are less wellknown”, said Kanokkitti­ka. “Apart from guests arriving by plane to Phuket, we also have boats coming in, including cruises, so you can imagine how many tourists come through Phuket.”

The shutdown of Maya Bay in an attempt to salvage the area’s coral reefs — which have been damaged by crowds of tourists and warmer temperatur­es — follows the closure of 10 popular Thai diving sites in 2016 after a National Parks survey found bleaching on up to 80 per cent of some reefs.

Pattaya, south of Bangkok, serves as another cautionary tale.

An influx of western tourists from as far back as the 1960s, when American soldiers came on leave from the Vietnam war, and a constructi­on boom in the 1990s transforme­d it from a picturesqu­e fishing village to a town known for its seedy nightlife and high crime rate.

Benjamin Cassim, a tourism lecturer at Temasek Polytechni­c School of Business in Singapore, said the closures of Boracay and Maya Beach could become “test cases” and will be closely monitored by other countries with popular beach resorts.

A non-profit group in Indonesia has been calling on the Government to tackle what it calls an “environmen­tal crisis” in Bali, which saw more than 5.5 million visitors last year.

Indonesian authoritie­s have long faced criticism for allowing unplanned developmen­ts that have swallowed up rice fields with golf courses and villas on Bali. Its beaches are regularly strewn with plastic washed up from the ocean.

Nonetheles­s, President Joko Widodo has been trying to promote creation of 10 “new Balis” in other parts of the Indonesian archipelag­o.

“Environmen­tal conditions in Bali are now increasing­ly degraded,” said I Made Juli Untung Pratama of Walhi, the Indonesian Forum for Environmen­t. “The culprit is the constructi­on of massive tourism accommodat­ion, without a proper regard to Bali’s environmen­t. The massive developmen­t of tourism accommodat­ion has caused the environmen­tal crisis in Bali.”

Shutdowns are not a new phenomenon. Back in 2004, Malaysian authoritie­s shut all hotels on the island of Sipadan, known for having some of the best scuba diving in the world, to help protect its eco-system and subsequent­ly restricted tourist numbers to the island.

But some say these extreme actions often come too late, and a more sustainabl­e solution is needed across the region.

“Proactive environmen­tal protection is a far more effective approach than reactive environmen­tal protection,” said Matt Gebbie, an analyst from Horwath HTL Indonesia, a tourism consultanc­y.

“You can’t revive coral reefs and eroded beaches and degraded forests in six months,” Gebbie said. “Proactive protection is essential for the long-term sustainabi­lity of resort destinatio­ns.”

 ?? Picture / AP ?? The island of Boracay is to be closed for six months for a revamp after the country’s President branded it a “cesspool”.
Picture / AP The island of Boracay is to be closed for six months for a revamp after the country’s President branded it a “cesspool”.

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