Khaleej Times

Tourism takes toll on Asia’s beaches

- AFP

koh phi phi ley (Thailand) — Hordes of tourists clamber across the white sand with selfie sticks as Thai park rangers wade into turquoise waters to direct boats charging into the cliff-ringed cove. Made famous by the 2000 movie

The Beach starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Maya Bay on the western Thai island of Koh Phi Phi Ley is now a case study in the ruinous costs of runaway tourism, swamped by up to 4,000 daily visitors.

“There is too many people here, it’s bad,” lamented Saad Lazrak, a 61-year-old from Morocco, as crowds around him swallowed the stretch of sand encircled by an amphitheat­re of limestone cliffs.

Across the region, Southeast Asia’s once-pristine beaches are reeling from decades of unchecked tourism as government­s scramble to confront trash-filled waters and environmen­tal degradatio­n without puncturing a key economic driver.

Thailand’s Maya Bay will be off limits for four months from June to September, officials announced last month, in a bid to save its ravaged coral reefs.

In the Philippine­s, President Rodrigo Duterte ordered this month the Boracay beach resort closed to tourists for up to six months from April 26, describing the destinatio­n as a “cesspool” tainted by sewage dumped directly into the sea.

Indonesian officials, meanwhile, declared a “garbage emergency” last year swamping a six-kilometre stretch of coast along the island of Bali. The island’s grim coastal pollution was highlighte­d in March by British diver Rich Horner’s viral video of swimming through a dystopia of trash swirling off shore.

“Plastic bags, more plastic bags, plastic, plastic, so much plastic!” Horner said in a Facebook post that has been viewed more than a million times.

Conservati­onists and government­s are worried about the health of coral reefs, which are in a dire state globally due to climate change and rising sea temperatur­es.

When exposed to warmer waters, they shed the algae that dazzle the eye and are vital to marine ecosystems, leaving the corals diseased or bone-white in a process called bleaching.

Environmen­tal stress, including pollution, human contact and exposure to plastics that comes with mass tourism are also major threats to reefs that are part of the draw for snorkeller­s and scuba-divers.

“Tourism has a series of detrimenta­l effects on coral health,” said Eike Schoenig, a Thailand-based marine biologist at the Center for Oceanic Research and Education.

Countries in Southeast Asia are looking to stem the threats without cutting off the cash flow of a regional tourism boom, led by China, the top source market for travellers to the region.

Thailand received 35 million tourists last year, of whom nearly 10 million hailed from China, according to official data.

But what is good for business can be bad for beaches.

Songtam Suksawang, Thailand’s National Park Office Director, said he personally inspected the beach at Maya Bay and said it “must definitely be (temporaril­y) closed” in order to rehabilita­te it.

He said authoritie­s are discussing new rules once the shut-down is lifted, such as restrictio­ns on the number of daily visitors, better regulation of boats and a higher entrance fee. Thailand is also conducting studies on six other marine parks, while the Philippine­s is weighing action on other top destinatio­ns buckling under mass tourism.

But government­s are wary of curtailing an industry that creates jobs and buoys economies.

Spending on travel and tourism contribute­d nearly $136 billion to the region’s GDP in 2017, a figure forecast to rise to $144 billion this year, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council.

The cost of the closures is already being felt in the Philippine­s, where hundreds of Boracay hotels and tour companies are facing steep losses from cancelled rooms, flights and other bookings.

But some countries are not taking such dramatic steps.

In Indonesia, the tourism ministry said there were no plans to close Bali or any other holiday destinatio­n in the archipelag­o, although it acknowledg­ed that pockets of the tropical paradise were under strain from heavy tourism.

“Shut down Bali? I don’t think we will need to do that yet,” said ministry spokesman Guntur Sakti. “Bali is the centre of Indonesian tourism.”

In fact, Indonesia has identified 10 other destinatio­ns where it is trying to boost visitors and replicate Bali’s success, including neighbouri­ng island Lombok and Lake Toba in Sumatra. Experts are also scetpical that short shut-downs will have lasting effects.

“Bottom line is that temporaril­y closing the beach is probably not the optimal solution to these problems. It only take a day for a bunch of incompeten­t snorkeller­s to trash a small reef,” said Andrew Baird from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies in Australia. —

It’s very touristy. There wasn’t a patch of sand that didn’t have people laying down on it, taking photos.” Oliver Black, a 22-year-old tourist

 ?? AFP ?? A crowd of tourists on the maya Bay beach on the southern thai island of Koh phi phi. —
AFP A crowd of tourists on the maya Bay beach on the southern thai island of Koh phi phi. —

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