The Scotsman

Travelling in the right direction with ecotourism

- Comment Marshall Dallas

Our vision statement at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Conference Centre (EICC) centres on creating an environmen­t to inspire ideas that change the world, a concept which translates to reality when game-changing conference­s and events are staged in our venue. One such event took place a fortnight ago, when the Travalyst Scotland Summit came to Edinburgh.

Led by HRH the Duke of Sussex, Travalyst is a global sustainabl­e tourism initiative, founded by Skyscanner, Booking.com, Tripadviso­r, Trip.com and Visa, that aims to change the impact of travel for good. A bit like hosting Tedsummit here last year, it was a real coup to have Travalyst choose Edinburgh for its summit.

Some of the latest industry figures indicate that there were around 1.4 billion total internatio­nal tourist arrivals in 2018, when worldwide tourism was valued at about £1.3 trillion and equated to roughly 2 per cent of global gross domestic product. The impact of all this travel is having a significan­t impact on our environmen­t, our communitie­s and our economies. It was fitting that Travalyst came to the EICC at a time when, more than ever, we are looking for solutions to mitigate the inherent adverse impacts of running conference­s which attract delegates from every corner of the planet. Increasing­ly, we consider it a moral imperative to place sustainabi­lity at the heart of everything we do.

Our newly refreshed sustainabi­lity programme, which builds on the work that we have already establishe­d at the EICC, is titled “Step Change” and focuses on three areas of interconne­cted impact: environmen­t, society and economy. In what we believe is a world first, every event at the EICC will now receive a detailed and bespoke event impact report which focuses on those three areas. In 2020, we know it makes commercial sense but we also think it’s simply the right thing to do.

We want to give something back to the country from which we operate, and will shortly be announcing a partnershi­p which will involve the EICC collaborat­ing with a respected charity that helps to protect the wild nature of Scotland for future generation­s while tackling the mighty challenge that is carbon emissions.

As a keen open water swimmer, Scotland’s wild environmen­t has special meaning for me and particular­ly so as, during 2020, our nation marks the Year of Coasts and Waters. Climate change has already passed through certain tipping points and even greater tipping points lie ahead.

Back at the Travalyst Scotland Summit, Visitscotl­and chairman, Lord Thurso, used the term “responsibl­e tourism” to describe what we need to collective­ly achieve as an industry. Lord Thurso said that when public opinion translates into political will, technologi­cal possibilit­ies can lead us to the problem-solving that will be required to bring about effective and lasting change.

When The Duke of Sussex, or “Harry” as he asked us to call him, took to the stage he praised the work taking place in Scotland to identify sustainabl­e tourism solutions. “There is a holistic ambition to Scotland’s intent,” he said, “that can be adopted across the UK and even around the world. Scotland is one of the fastest-growing tourism destinatio­ns worldwide and is at the forefront of a more sustainabl­e approach.”

Amsterdam-headquarte­red Booking. com, the metasearch site for travel accommodat­ion, produced some hot-off-the press research showing that 88 per cent of people want to travel sustainabl­y. At the same time, the Booking.com team admitted that responsibl­e travel is still a relatively new concept and that big travel groups need to do a better job at educating consumers about how they can travel in a more sustainabl­e way.

Overall though, it was greatly encouragin­g to see global tourism being pointed in the right direction.

Marshall Dallas, chief executive at Edinburgh Internatio­nal Conference Centre (EICC)

Every event at the EICC will now receive a detailed and bespoke event

impact report

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