The UN has launched a set of sustainable
tourism criteria designed to give businesses a best practice guide on how to
promote tourism while minimising environmental effects.
The
Global
Sustainable Tourism Criteria (GSTC) is based on 4,500 best practice
frameworks taken from projects all around the world.
"Tourism is one of the fastest growing industries and a strong contributor to
sustainable development and poverty alleviation," said Francesco Frangialli,
Secretary-General of the United Nations World
Tourism Organization (UNWTO).
"The GSTC initiative will undoubtedly constitute a major reference point for
the entire tourism sector and an important step in making sustainability an
inherent part of tourism development."
More than 900 million international tourists travelled last year and UNWTO
forecasts 1.6 billion tourists by the year 2020.
The criteria focus on four
areas: maximising tourism's benefits to local communities, reducing negative
effects on cultural heritage, reducing harm to local environments and planning
for sustainability.
Many of the guidelines also focus on how operators should ensure that they
are adhering to local rules and customs.
The GSTC partnership is developing educational materials and technical tools
to guide hotels and tour operators on how to implement the criteria.
The rules will help tourists distinguish genuinely green operators from those
firms that are over stating environmental credentials, according to Jeff Glueck,
chief marketing officer at travel agency trade association
Sabre.
"These criteria will allow true certification of sustainable practices in
hotels and resorts as well as other travel suppliers,” he said.
The Rainforest Alliance
also welcomed the criteria, arguing that they would allow
environmentally-conscious travellers to demand resorts and operators that meet
the global standards.
"The Global Sustainable Tourism Criteria that have been developed will shape
the minimum requirements that the Sustainable Tourism Stewardship Council will
demand from accredited certification programmes and help travellers have the
assurance that they are helping, not harming, the environment," said executive
director Tensie Whelan.
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