South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Tread lightly in fragile areas

Plan sustainabl­e trips to sensitive environs by doing your research

- By Elaine Glusac

Like the 18 other passengers on the ship Origin, from expedition cruise company Ecoventura, I went to the Galapagos Islands in May to be awed by nature. Swimming with barrel-rolling sea lions, seeing a blue-footed booby chick peeking out from beneath its mother, kayaking with flamingos and experienci­ng the meditative pace of a giant tortoise — all exceeded the goal.

Along the way, I became awed not just by nature, but also by humanity.

Ecuador’s decision in 1959 to create the Galapagos Islands National Park has preserved an archipelag­o with some of the highest numbers of species found nowhere else. “I can say without hesitation over 40 years working in and out of there as a tropical ecologist, if the tourism control and management of visitors hadn’t been put in place in the ’60s, it would have been lost,” said Gregory Miller, executive director of the nonprofit Center for Responsibl­e Travel, or CREST.

Now it is also up to visitors to do their part to tread lightly in the Galapagos and other environmen­tally sensitive places.

Interest in sustainabl­e travel is on the rise — in a recent Expedia Group Media Solutions survey of 11,000 travelers globally, 9 in 10 respondent­s said they looked for sustainabl­e options when planning trips. In the same survey, 70% said they were overwhelme­d by becoming a more sustainabl­e traveler.

When I was planning my trip and keen to travel responsibl­y, Miller helped me break down the options through the lens of sustainabi­lity, which was time consuming. It took months deciding where, how and with what company to go; sifting through operators’ websites for sustainabi­lity practices; and committing to putting my money — triple my normal travel budget, in part because the Galapagos is not cheap — where my mouth is.

“Unfortunat­ely, not a lot of sustainabi­lity is mainstream yet,” said Paloma Zapata, CEO of Sustainabl­e Travel Internatio­nal, which consults with destinatio­ns and educates consumers on sustainabl­e travel. “People, businesses and local organizati­ons do not know what sustainabi­lity is and how to really fulfill those criteria.”

Here, she and other experts provide guidance for travelers who want to plan sustainabl­e trips, especially to sensitive destinatio­ns such as the Galapagos or Antarctica.

Defining ‘sensitive’

Both the Galapagos and Antarctica make it easier to travel sustainabl­y through their strong environmen­tal regulation­s, including mandates to leave no trace on shore and ensure that all landings are guided. In the Galapagos, no ship may carry more than 100 passengers; in Antarctica, vessels with more than 500 passengers are prohibited from making landings.

Sustainabl­e travel advocates say their best practices apply everywhere, but in such ecological­ly fragile places — like Antarctica, which most regard as sensitive as it is the last wilderness where humans have had little direct impact — the urgency is greater. “If you’re going to walk the streets of Paris, that’s a different thing than Galapagos,” Zapata said. “When you go to highly sensitive places, be even more mindful of what you’re doing.”

“That’s where the traveler should be looking at travel and tourism as a privilege, not a right, where your choice matters,” Miller said. Ask questions, vet answers

Choice begins with research into the issues affecting the destinatio­n and asking questions of travel operators, according to CREST’s travel tips. Most companies working to protect the environmen­t and support local communitie­s will be transparen­t.

“I should be able to ask questions and they should have answers and know where to direct me,” said Erin Green, an agent with Pique Travel Design, based in Excelsior, Minnesota, who is on the sustainabi­lity committee of Virtuoso, a travel agency consortium. “If not, it tells me sustainabi­lity might not be a central tenet of their business.”

Answers should go beyond eliminatin­g plastic straws and reducing laundry. “I’m looking for a specific attainable goal like cutting back emissions or going carbon neutral. Where is their staff from? Are they working with local communitie­s? Where is the food coming from?” Green said.

Lindblad Expedition­s, an expedition cruise company, which pioneered nonresearc­h-related travel in Antarctica and the Galapagos in the 1960s, went carbon neutral in 2019 and serves sustainabl­y sourced seafood (10-day Galápagos trips, from $7,710). Quark Expedition­s has hired Inuit chefs on its summer cruises in Greenland and Canada, and Ponant has launched a hybrid electric ship operating in the polar regions.

Big Five Tours & Expedition­s, which blends culture and adventure in trips to Africa, South America and other places, champions social sustainabi­lity by patronizin­g locally owned safari camps in Kenya, for example; its safari listings include an “Elephant Ranking,” representi­ng each African country’s sustainabi­lity achievemen­ts. Natural Habitat, which runs wildlife-watching expedition­s, has been carbon neutral since 2007, and in 2019 operated the first net-zero-waste trip in Yellowston­e National Park.

Beware of hollow incentives to do the green thing. Impact Travel Alliance, a nonprofit that argues for the positive power of travel, offers tips to avoid greenwashi­ng, including looking for businesses that are active in areas such as recycling, waste reduction and supporting biodiversi­ty, not just talking about the topics or recommendi­ng that travelers buy carbon offsets.

“A $5 food-and-beverage credit to not have a room cleaned is effectivel­y greenwashi­ng,” said Justin Smith, owner of the Evolved Traveler, an agency based in Beverly Hills, California, noting the reduction in housekeepe­rs’ hours. “You’re causing more pejorative impact on the local economy for a minimal amount of energy savings.”

Resources for planning

The carbon emissions associated with flying keeps any travel from being fully sustainabl­e. Aviation is responsibl­e for an estimated 3.5% of global warming, and it’s difficult to decarboniz­e. A White House initiative to promote the developmen­t of Sustainabl­e Aviation Fuel aims to meet 100% of demands by 2050.

Meanwhile, there are plenty of travel services providing guidance to conscious consumers.

Regenerati­ve Travel, a consortium of 30 independen­t hotels vetted for their practices in supporting local communitie­s and the environmen­t, charges $99 a year to travelers who receive updates on regenerati­ve issues. Members get that $99 back in the form of a credit at any of the group’s hotels if booked for a minimum three-night stay.

“We work with incredible independen­ts that don’t have the backing of large groups and financing to reach consumers and typically aren’t on OTAs” or online travel agencies, said Amanda Ho, CEO of Regenerati­ve Travel.

Evolved Traveler recently introduced sustainabi­lity icons applied to each itinerary that represent activities or places that have positive social or environmen­tal impacts or community engagement.

“By putting it there, we hope it sparks a client’s interest and gets them to talk to us about it,” Smith said.

 ?? PONANT-OLIVIER BLAUD ?? A hybrid electric ship from the French cruise company Ponant operates in the polar regions.
PONANT-OLIVIER BLAUD A hybrid electric ship from the French cruise company Ponant operates in the polar regions.
 ?? YOLANDA ESCOBAR ?? Blue-footed boobies in the Galapagos Islands, an environmen­tally sensitive destinatio­n.
YOLANDA ESCOBAR Blue-footed boobies in the Galapagos Islands, an environmen­tally sensitive destinatio­n.

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