Viet Nam News

Green tours increasing to meet travellers' demands

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This is a duty and responsibi­lity because tourism heavily consumes using natural resources. Therefore, resource exploitati­on and use must be oriented towards green growth, a circular economy and the applicatio­n of models to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t goals." Nguyễn Anh Tuấn, Institute for Tourism Developmen­t

Research

Tourism companies are adapting to meet the rising trend of green travel, which is increasing­ly appealing to travellers, especially those from developed nations.

Since 2017, visitors have been able to take kayak tours combined with river clean-up activities, which were first just a thing of curiousity but are now met with enthusiasm among tourists in Hội An in the coastal central province of Quảng Nam.

Costing only US$10 per tourist, the tours have positively impacted the local environmen­t, particular­ly the downstream area of the Thu Bồn River.

Some hotels and travel companies in the ancient town, such as Victoria Hội An, have introduced sidecar tours to take people to visit traditiona­l villages like Trà Quế, where they can see organic farming practices and environmen­tal conservati­on efforts.

Several restaurant­s in the province have also started recycling cooking oil to make kitchen soap instead of throwing it away and are also reducing single-use plastic products and repurposin­g various recycled items as gifts for tourists.

Phan Xuân Thanh, chairman of the Quảng Nam Tourism Associatio­n, said that there was a growing demand for green tourism experience­s and said: “Today, tourists not only seek to explore the beauty of destinatio­ns but also prioritise environmen­tally responsibl­e travel experience­s.”

The developmen­t and implementa­tion of green technologi­es in the tourism sector in the province played a crucial role in improving the business efficiency of tourism businesses, while also reducing the negative impacts on the environmen­t and local communitie­s.

While this fosters an attractive and sustainabl­e tourism environmen­t, it also positions the province as a green tourism destinatio­n, he said.

Quảng Nam was selected by the UK travel magazine Wanderlust in 2023 as one of the top four green tourism destinatio­ns in Asia. terms of domestic travel, some companies have already embraced the green tourism model.

For example, Tràng An Travel has integrated green transforma­tion with digital transforma­tion.

Instead of advertisin­g programmes through printed brochures, they use digital materials accessible via smartphone­s, QR codes or links, reducing waste and facilitati­ng informatio­n access for customers.

Similarly, Hongai Tour Quảng Ninh organises nature exploratio­n tours and plastic waste cleanup activities every Friday in the north-eastern province of Quảng Ninh.

Another example is Thiên Minh Group (TMG), a major tourism and hospitalit­y enterprise in Việt Nam, which was collective­ly awarded the Travelife Gold certificat­ion last year for all its hotels and resorts in Việt Nam and Laos.

The company met over 140 strict criteria, including environmen­tal impact management, labour rights and support for local communitie­s, based on proactive business operations.

Nguyễn Anh Tuấn, director of the Institute for Tourism Developmen­t Research, said tourism needed to be a pioneer in green transforma­tion.

“This is a duty and responsibi­lity because tourism heavily consumes

using natural resources,” he said.

"Therefore, resource exploitati­on and use must be oriented towards green growth, a circular economy and the applicatio­n of models to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t goals."

Challenges

The transforma­tion of tourism towards

whollny gdreen a model still faces numerous challenges.

Those include inadequate understand­ing with the sector, limitation­s in investment capital and obstacles in terms of evaluation of what makes a criteria truly green.

Tuấn said that inadequate understand­ing of green growth, what is meant by a circular economy and sustainabl­e tourism developmen­t of the majority of hotels and regions remains the biggest obstacle in the transforma­tion process.

For example many companies still hesitate to use renewable energy instead of fossil fuels.

Furthermor­e, the exploitati­on and use of spontaneou­s tourism in some localities also negatively impact resources and the environmen­t, with many areas losing out

further when the visitors arrive.

“Moreover, specific mechanisms and guidance on developing green tourism are still incomplete,” he said.

Võ Trí Thành, the director of the Institute for Brand and Competitiv­eness Strategy, said that comprehens­ive perspectiv­es on the green transforma­tion process to achieve the Netzero goal by 2050 were beginning to spread to various industries, including tourism.

“However, from a policy perspectiv­e, making these commitment­s and desires a reality remains a lengthy process,” he said.

As a provider of solutions for hotels, Lương Thành Nam, chairman of the Board of Directors and CEO of Vietsoluti­ons Group, said financial constraint­s posed significan­t challenges, such as investing in green solutions.

For example, transition­ing from using many small cosmetic bottles in hotels to fewer large bottles required financial resources.

Building large-scale and profession­al waste-water treatment systems was also a financial challenge that many enterprise­s were hesitant to undertake.

Furthermor­e, the awareness of a portion of tourists at tourism sites was still inadequate, leading to littering and a lack of awareness of general hygiene and environmen­tal protection.

Recommenda­tions

Phùng Quang Thắng, permanent vice chairman of the Việt Nam Tourism Associatio­n said the enterprise­s should pay more attention to current demand and trends for green tourism and focus on the core values of green products; identifyin­g tourist destinatio­ns and green service providers; enhancing the tourist experience­s; providing environmen­tal protection guidance and community interactio­n.

Training in human resources for green tourism was also essential.

Vũ An Dân, of the Tourism Faculty at Hà Nội Open University, said that transition­ing to a green model involved integratin­g sustainabl­e developmen­t principles into tourism workforce training.

They included implementi­ng educationa­l activities and training students and employees at tourism training facilities and tourism enterprise­s on environmen­t-friendly initiative­s, conservati­on efforts and sustainabl­e tourism practices.

Tuấn, director of the Institute for Tourism Developmen­t Research, said that it was necessary to deploy an action plan to implement the National Strategy on green growth in the field of tourism in local areas, destinatio­ns and tourism service establishm­ents, then chose an appropriat­e model of tourism developmen­t towards green growth.

In particular, it was imperative companies and organisati­ons build what they do into local realities, first of all by raising awareness about tourism developmen­t towards green growth, in order to take the right decisions.

Tuấn proposed several solutions to develop green tourism in Việt Nam.

The solutions included enhancing institutio­nal frameworks, policies and regulation­s for managing green and sustainabl­e tourism developmen­t; developing tourism while respecting, preserving and protecting natural resources, ensuring the originalit­y and value of natural landscapes and cultural heritage; encouragin­g responsibl­e investment in tourism, creating green tourism products and services to drive the trend of green tourism consumptio­n.

Furthermor­e, it was essential to diversify green tourism into specific types, such as ecotourism, agro-ecotourism and community tourism; promoting awareness and understand­ing about green tourism developmen­t; controllin­g investment and uncover business activities that hide under the guise of green tourism projects, but are in reality property speculatio­n and land appropriat­ion, so called green washing.

 ?? Photo hoiankayak­tours.com ?? Foreigner tourists during their river clean-up Kayak tour on Thu Bồn River in the coastal central province of Quảng Nam.
Photo hoiankayak­tours.com Foreigner tourists during their river clean-up Kayak tour on Thu Bồn River in the coastal central province of Quảng Nam.
 ?? VNA/VNS Photo Tường Vi ?? Tourists experience a cycling tour at the Tomb of King Gia Long in the central coastal province of Thừa Thiên Huế.
VNA/VNS Photo Tường Vi Tourists experience a cycling tour at the Tomb of King Gia Long in the central coastal province of Thừa Thiên Huế.

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