The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ministry explores Tawau volcano tourism potential

- By Shalina R.

KOTA KINABALU: The Malaysian Ministry of Tourism and Culture (MOTAC) Sabah Office is exploring Tawau Hills Park as a possible start-up of volcano tourism in Sabah.

Volcano tourism, pursued under the ministry’s Sabah Sustainabi­lity Volunshari­ng Program (SSVP) with Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS), may not be a new global phenomenon but is still relatively new in Malaysia and especially Sabah.

MOTAC Sabah director Ag Ahmad Zaki Abu Bakar said he was happy with the collaborat­ive program and wished to continue this in the near future.

“We have been collaborat­ing since 2015 and won few recognitio­n,” he added.

The exploratio­n team of 10 this year involved MOTAC Sabah and 10 UMS students and staff with the guidance of the Tawau Hill Parks’ authority.

During the excursion, discussion­s with Tawau Hills Park had resulted in the identifica­tion of two volcanic spots within the park, namely the warm turquoise water of the white sulfurous springs, and ancient crater at Mount Lucia, one of the three large mountains inside the parks’ area.

In Sabah, Tawau’s Bombalai volcano is currently a dormant volcano and, since it was estimated to have erupted thousands of years ago, it can be regarded as an ancient crater.

Bombalai cinder cone is only a half-an-hour jungle walk from the entrance of Tawau Hills National Park.

Outside the Tawau Hills Park, there are other volcanic attraction­s such as Columnar Joints along the Balung River and Conical Sprouts at Andrassy where both sites are accessible from Tawau town.

Dr Awangku Hassanal Bahar Pengiran Bagul, a senior UMS lecturer in Tourism at the Faculty of Business, Economics and Accountanc­y and SSVP co-founder, said that volcano tourism usually integrates recreation­al activities such as sightseein­g, hiking, climbing, camping or even mountainee­ring.

He said that if the volcano tourism site was highly popular, it can be recognized as an independen­t tourism sector or as a value added adventure experience under the umbrella of geotourism.

He said the team had learned more about Sabah’s exciting volcanic geoheritag­e and believes the identifica­tion of the different aspects of geoheritag­e site values is part of a holistic concept of protection, education and sustainabl­e developmen­t of Tawau Hills Park and the surroundin­g area.

MOTAC Sabah and the UMS faculty have been running the SSVP with focus on sustainabi­lity issues in the tourism industry.

With the SSVP theme of heritage trail and tagal ecotourism previously, the program won IKON Award (High Impact University-Community Engagement Award) from UMS in 2016.

 ??  ?? Zaki (second left) and Hassanal (second right) trekked to the sulfurous volcanic spring in Tawau Hills Park with the SSVP 2017 team.
Zaki (second left) and Hassanal (second right) trekked to the sulfurous volcanic spring in Tawau Hills Park with the SSVP 2017 team.
 ??  ?? The sulfurous volcanic spring in Tawau Hills Park Park could be developed into a Sabah tourism attraction.
The sulfurous volcanic spring in Tawau Hills Park Park could be developed into a Sabah tourism attraction.

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