National Geographic Traveller (UK)

POLE POSITION?

-

With the Arctic warming three times faster than the rest of the planet, can travel to the region ever be sustainabl­e? Select tours to Svalbard suggest small group trips may be a force for good

At 78 degrees north of the Arctic Circle, Svalbard is the final frontier before the North Pole, some 650 miles of pack ice away. The archipelag­o is raw, elemental and brutally beautiful. By nature, it invites adventure: hiking, kayaking, camping, ski touring, dog sledding and snowmobili­ng. Go in search of polar bears and the Northern Lights, and you’ll find it works its magic on you in far more subtle and profound ways: the blue silence of the night; the sense-startling cold; the feeling of being alone on the frozen tundra, with mountains rearing up like great icy waves; and the sight of a wild reindeer, walrus or fleeting Arctic fox.

A trip to the Arctic has the power to change you and make you view the world di‰erently. But with a 2021 report by the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme suggesting the Arctic is warming three times faster than the rest of the planet, the sea ice rapidly melting and wildlife losing habitat as a consequenc­e, should we be there at all?

Can travel to the Arctic be sustainabl­e?

While critics point to the ‘last-chance tourism’ boom in big cruise liners, which pollute heavily and give back very little, other industry experts are adamant that travel to places like Svalbard can be a force for good, providing you make the right choices. Choose a small boat if cruising, they say, and one that actively supports local conservati­on and communitie­s.

“Unlike Antarctica, there’s no Arctic treaty, and the region’s vulnerabil­ity to exploitati­on is rising as its ice recedes.

But tourism can o‰er a disincenti­ve to threats like mining,” says Justin Francis, founder and CEO of Responsibl­e Travel, which o‰ers small-ship, environmen­tally sound, wildlife-focused cruises around Svalbard’s main inhabited island, Spitsberge­n. “Approached responsibl­y, travel here provides an unrivalled learning opportunit­y that transforms visitors into campaigner­s for the region’s protection and, crucially, an economic incentive for regional preservati­on. The key is sustainabl­e numbers that contribute significan­t value.”

Low-impact micro cruises

Run by passionate conservati­onists, Secret Atlas has gone even further, with leave-notrace expedition cruises on vessels carrying just 12 passengers. The environmen­t-focused company arranges tree-planting schemes and gives back to communitie­s through actions like Arctic beach clean-ups.

“Our 15-day Svalbard Pioneer cruise circumnavi­gates Spitsberge­n, venturing far out to visit the Austfonna ice cap and lots of rarely visited places with a veteran expedition leader,” enthuses co-founder Andy Marsh. “We ožen see wildlife like polar bears, whales, walruses, seals, reindeer, Arctic foxes and an abundance of birds.”

Andy believes travel companies can be a force for good. “When you see a pristine natural environmen­t, you realise what’s at stake and why it needs protection. Our voyages help to spread a very important environmen­tal message, encouragin­g people to stand up and protect the Arctic,” he says.

Sustainabl­e Svalbard

According to Sustainabl­e Tourism Svalbard project manager Sara Borchgrevi­nk Madsen, the future of responsibl­e travel in the Arctic involves encouragin­g travellers to choose environmen­tally certified tour operators that care about conservati­on and community. She emphasises the benefits of visiting during the low season (winter), and giving preference to non-motorised, reduced-footprint activities like skiing and dog sledding, o‰ered by companies like Green Dog, Basecamp Explorer and Svalbard Wildlife Expedition­s.

“It’s about making wise environmen­tal choices,” says Sara. “We encourage people to travel less and stay longer, and use existing infrastruc­ture near the town of Longyearby­en on Spitsberge­n. Allow time to really embrace Svalbard, discover its stillness and be humbled by nature.”

Environmen­talists say time is running out for the Arctic. Some damage is irreversib­le, but long-term strategies for sustainabl­e tourism could help to protect this precious region for many generation­s to come. Here David Attenborou­gh’s words ring true: “No one will protect what they don’t care about; and no one will care about what they’ve never experience­d.”

MORE INFO

responsibl­etravel.com secretatla­stravel.com wildlife.no greendog.no basecampex­plorer.com

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom