Download - Sustainable Tourism Development Presentation
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Sustainable Tourism Development
Linda J. Cox, PhD
Community Economic Development Specialistwww.ctahr.hawaii.edu/CoxL
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Sustainability
1. Meet our needs today without compromising the ability of people in the future to meet their needs.
2. People in the future are not made worse off than people are today, ie. product capacity is preserved.
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Sustainable Communities
Society Economy
Environment
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Sustainable Communities
Economy
Society
Environment
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Very Weak Sustainability Position
• Anthropocentric and utilitarian• Growth oriented and resource exploitative• Natural resources utilized at economically optimal
rates with free markets satisfying individuals• Infinite substitution between natural and human-
made capital• Continued well-being from economic growth and
technical innovation
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Weak Sustainability Position• Anthropocentric and utilitarian • Resource conservationist• Managed growth • Concern for intra- and intergenerational equity• Rejection of infinite substitution between natural and
human-made capital with some aspects of natural world being critical capital
• Human-made plus natural capital constant or rising• Decouple of environmental impacts and economic
growth
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Strong Sustainability Position
• (Eco)systems perspective• Resource preservationist• Recognizes value of maintaining ecosystems over
human resource utilization• Interests of the collective given more weight than those
of the individual consumer• Adherence to intra- and intergenerational equity• Constant natural assets rule• Zero economic and human population growth
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Very Strong Sustainability Position
• Bioethical and ecocentric• Resource preservationist to the point where
natural resources use is minimized• Nature’s rights include non-human living
organisms• Anti-economic growth and reduced human
population
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World Tourism Organization (WTO)
DefinitionSustainable tourism is tourism that meets the
needs of present tourists and host regions while protecting and enhancing
opportunities for the future.
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WTO agreed that
Sustainable tourism development guidelines and management practices are applicable to all forms
of tourism in all types of destinations.
Sustainability principles refer to the environmental, economic and socio-cultural aspects of tourism
development, and a suitable balance must be established between these three dimensions.
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Carrying Capacity• Central to sustainability and ecotourism• Many types exist
– Cultural– Social– Ecological
• Limits of Acceptable Change - compromise between resource protection and recreational use stated as a ratio rather than fixed number
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Ecotourism
Term coined in the late 1970s when mass tourism reached its peak.
A niche market that incorporates environmentally friendly and culturally protective techniques
Some feel it is rich people trying to see something rare or companies trying to use a trend to make money
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Niche Market
• Narrowly defined group of potential customers
• Businesses may be able to make more money by targeting environmentalists because they have higher incomes.
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Ecotourism
“Responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment and improves the welfare of local people”
The International Ecotourism Society
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Ecotourism should
• Involve travel to fragile, pristine and usually protected areas while striving to be low impact and small scale
• Educate the traveler• Provide funds for conservation• Benefit the economic development and political
empowerment of local communities • Foster respect for different cultures and for human
rights
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Tourism Sector
Ecotourism
Sustainable Tourism
Tourism
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Restricted Supply
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Restricted Supply
• Reduces amount supplied• Increases price• Customers need higher incomes to pay for
higher prices • Rich people may cause issues in the
community
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Visitor Satisfaction
• Quality• Health, hygiene and safety conditions• Sustainability
Rating systems exist for the first two.
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Elements of Conformity Assessment
• Standards• Assessment• Certification• Accreditation• Recognition• Acceptance
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• More than 100 ecological programs worldwide certify or grant awards to tourism operations
• Each program has its own standards• Many sustainable tourism and ecotourism
initiatives focus exclusively on certification, ignoring the other components
• Goal is a cost effective, credible sustainable tourism conformity assessment system
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Standards
• Prescriptive-how things will be done
• Performance-what will be achieved
• Management system- how things will be done and overall what will be achieved
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Assessment
• First-party assessment - supplier (self) assessment
• Second-party assessment - purchaser assessment
• Third-party assessment - done by an organization not related to the supplier or the purchaser
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Certification
• First-party - supplier declaration is common • Second-party - commonly used by large
purchasers• Third-party -a technically competent
certifier is needed• Supplier’s audit confirmation - third party
assesses the supplier’s internal audit system
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• Certification programs mandated by government regulation more rigorous and expensive than voluntary private sectors programs.
• Voluntary programs vary greatly• Types include
– Conventional– Sustainable– Ecotourism
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Accreditation
• Process to certify the certifiers• Important element of third party systems• No international accreditation program for
tourism• Peer review process includes
– Self-evaluation– On-site assessment by auditors– Judgment by accreditation body
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Acceptance
• Accreditation and recognition address credibility, acceptance requires that producers and customers be educated about the benefits of certification
• A complementary marketing efforts is needed to alert all stakeholders about issues
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Certification Benefits
• Increased Producer Satisfaction• More Sustainable Tourism Businesses• More Competitive Local Tourism Markets• Increased Profitability of Tourism Sector• Improved Public Image of Tourism Sector• Increased Community Dialogue
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Certification Benefits
• Better Credit Opportunities• Reduced Liability and Insurance Costs• More Capable and Dedicated Workers• Proactive and Participatory Tourism
Businesses• More Efficient Technology Transfer
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Keys to the Process of Standard Development
• Openness - all persons who will be affected must be allowed to participate
• Balance - no single interest category should account for more than one third of group deciding on the standards
• Consensus - all views and objections should be considered and an effort be made to resolve differences
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Interest Categories
• Producer or suppliers• Users• Affected public• General interest
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Successful Systems
• Continue to be responsive to major stakeholders who prefer a grading mechanism to a pass/fail decision
• Are self-supporting and financially stable-direct cost of assessment (certifier) and the cost of implementing (supplier)
• In the long-run costs should be paid by the tourism industry and its customers
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Caveats
• An overall tourism policy and plan are needed first with sustainable tourism as the goal
• Certification is a means to implement the plan• Commitment to a political process that includes all
members of the local community is needed• Limiting supplies will result in price increases and
then customers tend to have higher than average incomes