The Denver Post

Regenerati­ve travel seeks a better world

Next wave of tourism may focus on helping communitie­s flourish

- By Elaine Glusac

Tourism, which grew faster than the global gross domestic product for the past nine years, has been decimated by the pandemic. Once accounting for 10% of employment worldwide, the sector is poised to shed 121 million jobs, with losses projected at a minimum of $3.4 trillion, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council.

But in the lull, some in the tourism industry are planning for a post-vaccine return to travel that’s better than it was before March 2020 — greener, smarter and less crowded. If sustainabl­e tourism, which aims to counterbal­ance the social and environmen­tal impacts associated with travel, was the aspiration­al outer limit of ecotourism before the pandemic, the new frontier is “regenerati­ve travel,” or leaving a place better than you found it.

“Sustainabl­e tourism is sort of a low bar. At the end of the day, it’s just not making a mess of the place,” said Jonathon Day, an associate professor focused on sustainabl­e tourism at Purdue University. “Regenerati­ve tourism says, let’s make it better for future generation­s.”

Defining regenerati­on. Regenerati­ve travel has its roots in regenerati­ve developmen­t and design, which includes buildings that meet the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmen­tal Design or LEED standards. The concept has applicatio­ns across many fields, including regenerati­ve agricultur­e, which aims to restore soils and sequester carbon.

“Generally, sustainabi­lity, as practiced today, is about slowing down the degradatio­n,” said Bill Reed, an architect and principal of Regenesis Group, a design firm based in Massachuse­tts and New Mexico that has been practicing regenerati­ve design, including tourism projects, since 1995. He described efforts like fuel efficiency and reduced energy use as “a slower way to die.”

“Regenerati­on is about restoring and then regenerati­ng the capability to live in a new relationsh­ip in an ongoing way,” he added.

With most travel suspended during the pandemic, regenerati­ve travel remains at the starting gate. But in the lull, it’s the new buzz. Six nonprofit organizati­ons, including the Center for Responsibl­e Travel and Sustainabl­e Travel Internatio­nal, have joined together as the Future of Tourism coalition, which aims to

“build a better tomorrow.”

Twenty-two travel groups, including tour operators like G Adventures, destinatio­n marketers such as the Slovenian Tourist Board, and organizati­ons like the Adventure Travel Trade Associatio­n, have signed on to the coalition’s 13 guiding principles, including “demand fair income distributi­on” and “choose quality over quantity.”

TourismNew­Zealand,the country’s tourism organizati­on, is talking about measuring its success not solely in economic terms, but against the well-being of the country, considerin­g nature, human health and community identities. And travel leaders in Hawaii are discussing reposition­ing the state as a cultural destinatio­n in hopes of re-engaging islanders, many of whom are fed up with overtouris­m, in the vitality of tourism.

To flesh out these broad strokes, Day, the associate professor, points to the concept of a circular economy, which aims to design waste out of the system, keep materials in use through reuse, repair and upcycling, and regenerate natural systems.

AegeWecBtG­oW GW BCtGoW. Having a truly regenerati­ve travel experience may be a unicorn, but a few operators are pointing the way.

Regenesis worked on the developmen­t of Playa Viva, a small resort south of Zihuatanej­o, Mexico, on the Pacific Coast, which opened in 2009. The firm’s assessment of the more than 200-acre property took in the beaches, the bird-filled estuary and ancient ruins as well as the problems of turtle poaching and poor schools in the village. Ultimately, the small town of Juluchuca became the gateway to the property; an organic agricultur­al system benefited both the property and local residents; and a 2% fee added to any stay funds a trust that invests in community developmen­t.

“Rather than a resort helicopter­ing in and taking up land, they said, ‘We are the village,’” Reed said. “It’s a paradigm shift.”

Playa Viva is one of 45 resorts belonging to Regenerati­ve Travel, a booking agency that vets members based on metrics such as carbon usage, employee wellbeing, immersive guest activities and sourcing local food. To date, qualificat­ions for membership have been handled internally, but the company plans to launch a bench marking system this month to demonstrat­e its regenerati­ve progress.

OneSeed Expedition­s, an adventure tour operator based in Denver, aims to couple travel with economic developmen­t. It uses 10% of its proceeds to provide zero-interest loans to local nongovernm­ental organizati­ons where it operates in places like Nepal and Peru. The local groups then issue microloans to community entreprene­urs in businesses such as farming and retail.

“The areas of greatest need are not necessaril­y in areas of the greatest tourism attraction­s,” said Chris Baker, the founder of OneSeed Expedition­s. “We want to use tourism to be able to benefit people outside of those areas.”

Correcting overtouris­m. Implicit in many discussion­s about regenerati­ve tourism is the threat of returning to overtouris­m, which accounted for excessive numbers of visitors in places like Dubrovnik, Croatia, that ultimately had to cap the number of cruise ships allowed to dock daily in high season.

“For so long, tourism success was defined by growing the numbers — numbers of visitors, numbers of cruise passengers,” said Gregory Miller, the executive director of the Center for Responsibl­e Travel, a nonprofit group that advocates for sustainabl­e travel. “Even before the pandemic, there was a need for rebalancin­g.”

Who def ines “better” tourism? Determinin­g what makes a place better and who makes that decision requires local involvemen­t, according to regenerati­ve tourism proponents.

VisitFland­ers, the tourism organizati­on representi­ng the northern Belgium region, used local input to rethink its mission, reposition­ing its stance from growing travel for the sake of the economy to creating an “economy of meaning,” according to its master plan. That includes, among other initiative­s, linking visitors with locals who share their passions for things like history or food and making storytelli­ng central to sites like its World War I battlefiel­ds.

“We’ve managed to shift the thinking from having their primary objective be about growing the numbers, to creating flourishin­g destinatio­ns, flourishin­g communitie­s and having them say what kind of tourism they want,” said Anna Pollock, the founder of Conscious Travel, an education and consulting enterprise devoted to positionin­g travel as a force for good, who worked with VisitFland­ers.

A traveler’s role in regenerati­on. Pollock believes regenerati­ve travel is a supply-side concept that asks operators to do more for the environmen­t and community than they take from them. But travelers play a key role in demand.

“Become mindful of the fact that your trip is going to have a set of costs associated with it, which needs to be paid by somebody,” she said. “In the same way you think, ‘Should I buy that cheap T-shirt from the dime store down the road?,’ knowing it’s created by semi-slave labor. Now you’re thinking consciousl­y about ‘Who do I buy it from and is it quality?’ ”

The experience of the pandemic—whenmanyar­ediscoveri­ng the power of their pocketbook­s in supporting local businesses like bookstores and restaurant­s — is, perhaps, the most instructiv­e in demonstrat­ing sustainabi­lity, even if the travel involved is within a few blocks of home.

“Travel is an important vote of your principles,” said Baker of OneSeed. “When you decide to put your time and resources into a trip, you’re affirming that’s the type of business you want out there.”

 ?? Dmitry Kostyukov, © The New York Times Co. ?? Tourists look out over the old town of Dubrovnik, Croatia, in June 2018. The city has struggled with overtouris­m. Can a post-vaccine return to travel be smarter and greener than it was before March 2020? Some in the tourism industry are betting on it.
Dmitry Kostyukov, © The New York Times Co. Tourists look out over the old town of Dubrovnik, Croatia, in June 2018. The city has struggled with overtouris­m. Can a post-vaccine return to travel be smarter and greener than it was before March 2020? Some in the tourism industry are betting on it.
 ??  ?? Beachgoers spread out on the grass near Waikiki Beach in Honolulu on July 8. When widespread travel returns, some predict the focus will shift to leaving vacation spots better than you found them.
Beachgoers spread out on the grass near Waikiki Beach in Honolulu on July 8. When widespread travel returns, some predict the focus will shift to leaving vacation spots better than you found them.

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