Sunday Star-Times

Planet-positive getaways

Holidays without the guilt baggage

- – traveller.com.au

I’m the first to admit that when someone says ‘‘sustainabi­lity’’ my eyes roll. It’s one of those killjoy words that suggest it will be followed by a lecture on what’s good and not good for me.

Human nature responds better to being coaxed than told, as all parents learn when faced with a child who will not swallow their peas. (First lesson – poking their cheek does not help.)

Recognisin­g this, many people in the travel industry have switched to using the word ‘‘regenerati­ve’’ when talking about eco or green initiative­s, highlighti­ng the positive benefits of travelling in a way that’s considerat­e of others and our increasing­ly fragile planet. If you take something, you put something else back, like a kind of cosmic book swap.

Regenerati­ve does sound a bit Gwyneth Paltrow, though, like a result you might achieve after a week at a wellness resort at the back of Byron Bay. ‘‘Eco’’ and ‘‘green’’, which I used in the preceding paragraph, are vague, often go unchalleng­ed and are too regularly used as public relations spin, like a fuel-guzzling bus emblazoned with the logo ‘‘Green Tours’’. Even though we sort of get what they mean.

Whatever words we use, I do think people understand that unfettered mass tourism, while egalitaria­n, has reached the tipping point – and now negatively affects the communitie­s and environmen­ts it might have once benefited.

In the big picture, the juggernaut of climate change is threatenin­g our most beloved attraction­s. They may no longer be there, at least not in the same form, if we don’t give them urgent attention.

Unesco has proposed that Australia’s Great Barrier Reef be reclassifi­ed as endangered, threatenin­g its removal from the coveted World Heritage List. That this could happen, and so rapidly, is unimaginab­le and yet there have been warnings since 2016 with the first mass coral bleaching.

The way things are going, the only chance our children and grandchild­ren will have to see corals will be in an aquarium. Actually, in a couple of decades, if we reach global warming of 2 degrees Celsius, it might be the only way we can experience them. Just 1 per cent of the world’s corals can survive that level of warming, with massive implicatio­ns for the planet’s health.

Research by travel search engine company Booking.com shows that many travellers feel anxious about climate change and are prepared to take more responsibi­lity in their travel choices so that future generation­s might enjoy the same pleasures of travel.

The 2021 Sustainabl­e Travel Report discovered that 77 per cent of Kiwi travellers think sustainabl­e travel is vital, and 61 per cent said they will avoid popular destinatio­ns and attraction­s to disperse the benefits of travel. A total of 81 per cent want to stay in sustainabl­e accommodat­ion; 75 per cent would like to use more environmen­tally friendly modes of transport such as walking, cycling and public transport and 49 per cent think there are not enough sustainabl­e options.

So, it’s not really that the intention to be a good traveller is lacking, but there are often roadblocks in the way. One is the perception that having a good time and being a good global citizen are mutually exclusive. As a friend said to me recently, ‘‘When I go on holiday, I want to have fun. I don’t want to feel guilty about it.’’

Consider this – many of the most fun and rewarding travel experience­s can also be planet positive. Think camping, hiking, food tours with locals or indigenous guides, hanging out at cafes and spending money in communitie­s, visiting artists, taking long train journeys, or helping scientists do research.

Another roadblock is the perception that sustainabl­e travel will cost more. It’s true that some of the world’s most environmen­tally responsibl­e travel brands – Six Senses, Soneva, Aman, One&Only among them – are the big-ticket ones. The same can be said for small ship cruises and bespoke small group tours. Travellers pay a premium for space, access, less crowds and the service that goes with these.

Many of these brands invest heavily in the legacy of the natural world, the societies and the heritage buildings in which they exist, and they do it for future generation­s, not just those who can afford to visit now. But they do remain out of the reach for many travellers.

Still, they are just a tiny fraction of what’s available in the world of travel.

The pandemic showed that experienci­ng nature and taking part in community are two things travellers desire most. In New Zealand, we have national parks and three world heritage sites ripe for exploring. We can visit destinatio­ns ravaged by weather and loss of tourism due to closed borders. We can learn more about our own country. We can travel to rural towns and find out about life outside the cities. We can stay on farms, visit small wineries, go surfing on uncrowded breaks.

That is sustainabl­e travel. And in many cases, we’re already doing it.

 ??  ?? Unesco has proposed that the Great Barrier Reef, above, be reclassifi­ed as endangered; below, experience­s such as camping, hiking and food tours are sustainabl­e options.
Unesco has proposed that the Great Barrier Reef, above, be reclassifi­ed as endangered; below, experience­s such as camping, hiking and food tours are sustainabl­e options.
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