Crowded beaches. Expensive rent. Tourist attractions with countless people.
When it involves overtourism, don't blame the travelers, said Randy Durband, CEO of the Global Sustainable Tourism Council.
It's more on account of a “lack of management,” he told Squawk Box Asia on Monday.
“I have been in the travel and tourism industry for 40 years, serving on boards and trade associations in Europe, North America and Asia,” he said. “Governments around the world traditionally simply didn’t believe they had a role in governance.”
From marketing to management
Destination marketing organizations “need to change the 'M' in DMO from marketing to management,” Durband told CNBC before the interview.
He added that this transformation has begun but continues to be in its infancy.
“This is the great awakening that needs to happen and the government needs to understand that tourism is a sector that needs to be managed,” he said. “There are ways to manipulate, to control, to add capacity … to address the problem.”
He pointed to several examples of places where that is already being implemented well.
“We “We see good management of protected areas and national parks,” he said. “But so much still needs to be done to create awareness of what needs to be done at the government level.”
“Master” of crowd control
But that doesn't apply to China, he said.
“The Chinese are masters at expanding capacity and managing flows,” Durband said. He quoted them Leshan Great Buddha for example.
“Everyone comes for the Buddha, but town government has built an infinite attraction next to it… which is dispersing visitors,” he said of the area, which now includes developed parkland and a cave full of giant carved figures.
He said Chinese officials had also set up a control center with video screens to track visitors at various locations. Of the narrow stairs to get to the Buddha: “You know, before the steps are dangerously crowded,” he told CNBC Travel after the interview.
“I think that many iconic heritage sites around the world where overcrowding is a problem would benefit from additional and ideally temporary viewing sites that prepare the visitor so that they do not feel forced to linger at the main attraction,” he said.
However, he said all popular websites need technology to “monitor visitor flows.”
Control of tourism flows
He said the small French village of Saint Guilhem le Désert changed the “flow” of travelers after someone in the town died of a heart attack and traffic prevented an ambulance from providing assistance.
Residents could drive to the village by car, Durband said. However, visitors are instructed to park in a designated area outside the village on weekends and in summer and then cycle, walk or take an electric shuttle bus to the village.
The strategy could even work in a city like Barcelona, which receives around 17 million visitors a year, he said. On July 6, demonstrators marched through Barcelona demanding that the city reduce the number of tourists visiting.
Demand won’t decrease.
Randy Durband
CEO of the Global Sustainable Tourism Council.
But town is targeted on “flow,” a spokesperson told CNBC Travel last week.
“The measure of the success of tourism in Barcelona cannot focus on the number of visitors, but rather on managing the flow of people so that a social and environmental limit is not crossed,” said the spokesman for the Barcelona City Council.
Durband said it will be particularly difficult to administer visitor flows in Barcelona. Unlike other major cities, visitors are likely to congregate in the identical areas that residents prefer, increasing tensions between the 2 groups, he said.
“Everyone wants to go to the same small area of Old Town, so dispersal would require a fairly comprehensive strategy to achieve that,” he said.
Still, he said it was “absolutely” possible.
“Demand will not go down,” he said, pointing to the 8 billion people now on the planet and a growing middle class within the Asia-Pacific region. “Therefore, capacity needs to be increased and management approaches to distributing visitors need to be significantly improved.”
image credit : www.cnbc.com
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