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Tourism push for eco labelling
The tourism industry needs to
build an eco-label system, according to a leading official of the hotel
management section.
Nguyen Phuong Anh, deputy director of the Hotel Department under the Viet Nam
National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), made the comment at a two-day meeting
of international and domestic experts in Ha Noi which was started yesterday.
The eco-label system is a market-based and transparent economic tool that aims
to decrease environmental impacts and improve resource efficiency of products
while enabling consumers to make informed decisions based on products’
environmental credentials. These indicate the overall environmental
preferability of a product within a particular product category based on
life-cycle considerations.
An eco-label for Vietnamese hotels and resorts would help create a good
reputation for environmentally-friendly tourism and attract more visitors, Anh
said.
Waste, noise
Despite the economic downturn, the tourism industry was still making a profit,
but along with increasing tourists came increasing problems for the environment,
she said.
Last year, Viet Nam received 4.2 million international visitors, and clocked in
around 19.5 million domestic tourists at its total of about 5,000 hotels and
other holiday accommodation.
She said that the tourism industry was influencing the environment with waste,
noise and thermal emissions, but also stimulated employment in the local area.
Tourism also bumped up consumption of resources, Anh said.
According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), a popular tourist
destination will consume three or four times as many resources as a normal
locality, and tourism generates 11 per cent of global GDP, employs 200 million
people but produces 4.8 million tonnes of waste yearly. The organisation also
forecasts the number of tourists to double to 1.6 billion by the year 2020.
That put sustainable management of natural resources and waste at the fore when
aiming towards protecting the economic sector and natural ecosystems, the
meeting heard.
Brahmanand Mohanty, Regional Adviser for Asia of French Environment and
Management Agency, said the accommodation sector was at the hub of the tourism
industry and as a result, without good management, activities in the sector
tended to affect the environment adversely.
Mohanty said while big hotels and resorts seemed to adopt environment
management, small and medium-sized ones were lagging behind.
According to a survey in hotels and resorts in Viet Nam carried out by the
energy conservation research and development centre, most of the surveyed hotels
and resorts had started paying attention to resource management, however, they
did not have the capacity to implement them.
The survey also found that 79 per cent of small to medium-sized hotels did not
train their staff on energy saving. Only 8 per cent use stickers or posters to
encourage guests to save the resources.
The centre also suggested that the administration should introduce green-hotel
guidelines to all hotels and resorts in the country and develop the eco-label
system with appreciate indicators.
Nguyen Thi Tho, official of UNEP’s Tourism and Resource Efficiency, said the
profits made from the sector could be re-invested in environmental protection as
compensation for destruction.
She said the industry accounted for 9.5 per cent of the global total investments
- as much as US$1.15 trillion. The industry was an important source of
investment for developing countries like Viet Nam.
Good solution
Erica Allis, project manager of French Environment and Energy Management Agency
(ADEME), said three quarters the tourists did not want their travel to damage
the environment and over one-third were willing to pay more for service
providers to protect the environment during their visit.
In this case, the eco-label was the answer.
The label was expected to reduce the environmental impacts of the manufacturing
of products or provision of the service, said one participant.
A Thai participant said Thailand’s famous eco-label was Green Leaf, which has
made visitors proud to contribute to the betterment of the environment during
the holiday, which can encourage them to get the eco service again and recommend
the service to others.
Source: VietNamNet/Viet Nam News |
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