Reading 5 - Passage 1
The Impact of Wilderness Tourism
A
The market for tourism in remote areas is booming as never before. Countries
all across the world are actively promoting their ‘wilderness’ regions - such
as mountains, Arctic lands, deserts, small islands and wetlands - to high-spending
tourists. The attraction of these areas is obvious: by definition, wilderness
tourism requires little or no initial investment. But that does not mean that
there is no cost. As the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development
recognized, these regions are fragile (i.e. highly vulnerable to abnormal pressures)
not just in terms of their ecology, but also in terms of the culture of their
inhabitants. The three most significant types of fragile environment in these
respects, and also in terms of the proportion of the Earth's surface they cover,
are deserts, mountains and Arctic areas. An important characteristic is their
marked seasonality, with harsh conditions prevailing for many months each year.
Consequently, most human activities, including tourism, are limited to quite
clearly defined parts of the year.
Tourists are drawn to these regions by their natural landscape beauty and the
unique cultures of their indigenous people. And poor governments in these isolated
areas have welcomed the new breed of ‘adventure tourist’, grateful for the hard
currency they bring. For several years now, tourism has been the prime source
of foreign exchange in Nepal and Bhutan. Tourism is also a key element in the
economies of Arctic zones such as Lapland and Alaska and in desert areas such
as Ayers Rock in Australia and Arizona's Monument Valley.
B
Once a location is established as a main tourist destination, the effects on
the local community are profound. When hill-farmers, for example, can make more
money in a few weeks working as porters for foreign trekkers than they can in
a year working in their fields, it is not surprising that many of them give
up their farm-work, which is thus left to other members of the family. In some
hill-regions, this has led to a serious decline in farm output and a change
in the local diet, because there is insufficient labour to maintain terraces
and irrigation systems and tend to crops. The result has been that many people
in these regions have turned to outside supplies of rice and other foods.
In Arctic and desert societies, year-round survival has traditionally depended
on hunting animals and fish and collecting fruit over a relatively short season.
However, as some inhabitants become involved in tourism, they no longer have
time to collect wild food; this has led to increasing dependence on bought food
and stores. Tourism is not always the culprit behind such changes. All kinds
of wage labour, or government handouts, tend to undermine traditional survival
systems. Whatever the cause, the dilemma is always the same: what happens if
these new, external sources of income dry up?
The physical impact of visitors is another serious problem associated with the
growth in adventure tourism. Much attention has focused on erosion along major
trails, but perhaps more important are the deforestation and impacts on water
supplies arising from the need to provide tourists with cooked food and hot
showers. In both mountains and deserts, slow-growing trees are often the main
sources of fuel and water supplies may be limited or vulnerable to degradation
through heavy use.
C
Stories about the problems of tourism have become legion in the last few years.
Yet it does not have to be a problem. Although tourism inevitably affects the
region in which it takes place, the costs to these fragile environments and
their local cultures can be minimized. Indeed, it can even be a vehicle for
reinvigorating local cultures, as has happened with the Sherpas of Nepal's Khumbu
Valley and in some Alpine villages. And a growing number of adventure tourism
operators are trying to ensure that their activities benefit the local population
and environment over the long term.
In the Swiss Alps, communities have decided that their future depends on integrating
tourism more effectively with the local economy. Local concern about the rising
number of second home developments in the Swiss Pays d'Enhaut resulted in limits
being imposed on their growth. There has also been a renaissance in communal
cheese production in the area, providing the locals with a reliable source of
income that does not depend on outside visitors.
Many of the Arctic tourist destinations have been exploited by outside companies,
who employ transient workers and repatriate most of the profits to their home
base. But some Arctic communities are now operating tour businesses themselves,
thereby ensuring that the benefits accrue locally. For instance, a native corporation
in Alaska, employing local people, is running an air tour from Anchorage to
Kotzebue, where tourists eat Arctic food, walk on the tundra and watch local
musicians and dancers.
Native people in the desert regions of the American Southwest have followed
similar strategies, encouraging tourists to visit their pueblos and reservations
to purchase high-quality handicrafts and artwork. The Acoma and San Ildefonso
pueblos have established highly profitable pottery businesses, while the Navajo
and Hopi groups have been similarly successful with jewellery.
Too many people living in fragile environments have lost control over their
economies, their culture and their environment when tourism has penetrated their
homelands. Merely restricting tourism cannot be the solution to the imbalance,
because people's desire to see new places will not just disappear. Instead,
communities in fragile environments must achieve greater control over tourism
ventures in their regions; in order to balance their needs and aspirations with
the demands of tourism. A growing number of communities are demonstrating that,
with firm communal decision-making, this is possible. The critical question
now is whether this can become the norm, rather than the exception.