Bangkok Post

Rail expansion raises concern

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MEXICO CITY: Mexico’s president-elect wants to bring tourism revenues to remote and forgotten stretches of Mexico, but some are scratching their heads at his main proposal: to build a US$3.2 billion (106.8 billion baht) train that would run from the resort of Cancun to the Mayan ruins of Palenque,830 kilometres across the Yucatan peninsula.

The route is dotted by low jungle, wildlife reserves, pre-Hispanic archaeolog­ical sites, wetlands and undergroun­d rivers that can suddenly cave in. It would take years to build, and soak up scarce money, just to reach ruin sites like Calakmul, which now gets only about 35,000 visitors a year — the number better-known sites like Chichen Itza have in a week.

For those who like the plan proposed by Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, it’s all about getting people off the beaten track — away from the heavily traveled tourist route of Cancun-Riviera Maya-Chichen Itza-Xcaret that is visited by millions of tourists per year.

“Tourists today prefer other types of tourism projects that are more in contact with nature. ... They are showing less interest in the coast,’” said Vicente Ferreyra, a Cancun-based consultant whose Sustentur company specialise­s in sustainabl­e tourism. “They are turning more toward the jungle, and there is an opportunit­y to diversify for markets that don’t just want sun and sand.”

So, imagine if you could hop on a train at the Cancun airport and step off two hours later in one of the communitie­s at the edge of the Sian Ka’an nature reserve, south of Tulum, where the coast turns into lagoons and mangroves.

Villages like Muyil are offering tours such as floating down fresh-water canals dug by the Mayans, visiting local pre-Hispanic ruins, seeing local craftsmen and sampling regional foods.

Few doubt that the first stretch of the proposed train — from Cancun through the Riviera Maya to Tulum — would be heavily used. Almost 7 million internatio­nal tourists visit this stretch of coast every year, many of them arriving at the Cancun airport and then taking buses or driving down the coast.

While resorts have been popping up south of Cancun since the 1990s, most hotel workers still live in Cancun, which was founded in 1974. So, huge numbers of tourism workers could also use the train to commute to their jobs, a trip that can currently take some of them an hour and a half or more.

But it’s not clear whether the train would have stops at Playa del Carmen or other busy resorts that would be destinatio­ns for the tourists and workers. The initial plan shows it making its only Maya Riviera stop in Tulum before heading farther south.

It is the second, southern stretch from Tulum to the unpictures­que Maya town of Felipe Carrillo Puerto, just southwest of the Sian Ka’an environmen­tal reserve, then on to Bacalar, the state capital of Chetumal, Calakmul and Palenque that raises more questions. Some see it as an expensive folly. There is little developed tourism infrastruc­ture until one gets around the Bacalar freshwater lagoon. And the route from there west is practicall­y undevelope­d.

“The biggest doubt is the profitabil­ity of the project, based on tourism flows,” said Francisco Madrid Flores, director of the Tourism and Gastronomy Department at Mexico’s Anahuac University. “In southern Campeche, where Calakmul is, there are practicall­y no hotel rooms.”

That’s not to say that Mayan communitie­s there don’t have something to offer tourists beyond sites such as Calakmul, a sprawling ancient Maya city-state almost completely covered in low jungle. Five communitie­s in the low jungle around Calakmul already offer hiking, biking, bird watching, cave tours, kayaking and craft workshops.

 ?? AP ?? The proposed train link is aimed to generate more revenue from sites off the beaten path like this temple at Palenque.
AP The proposed train link is aimed to generate more revenue from sites off the beaten path like this temple at Palenque.

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