Sri Lanka first carbon-neutral destination in the world? |
|||
|
|||
Presentation of Hon. Minister of Tourism
This presentation was made at the event, on behalf of the Minister by the Chairman, Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority Renton de Alwis.
Secretary General of the United Nations World Tourism Organisation, Fellow Ministers, Heads of other UN Agencies, Leaders of the Travel and Tourism Industry, Ladies and Gentlemen.
Ours was a hydro-civilisation. The typical village unit consisted of the irrigation tank, river or other water body, the forest around, the fields the people cultivated and their place of worship. They, for over two thousand six hundred years of documented history lived in harmony with nature, maintaining a state of equilibrium. They were one with nature and their environment. But much of that has changed today. While in comparison to many other nations, we have been able to retain the charm of much of our natural environment and make a strong nature, culture, adventure based tourism offer to our visitors, our challenge is to keep all of that, that way. We are here today and have been at several other forums to discuss the effects of green house gas emissions, and its impacts on climate change, because we all see a breaking down of that equilibrium.
While I do not want to bore you with data and statistics, I can not but help, present a few. We are a small island and can not claim to be any where close to the voluminous carbon sinks of that of the Amazon or the Congo. Yet, Sri Lanka is home to a record number of some 3,368 species of vascular plants, 200 plus species of reptiles and amphibians, 419 bird species and 89 species of mammals, many of which are endemic. Of these, 26% of vascular plants, 49% of reptiles, 40% of all woody plants are endemic to Sri Lanka. This is not only significant in terms of global conservation importance. It is also of much economic value to our local communities. Our extensive forests, the home of many valuable endemic tree species and non-timber forest products are of much economic significance. Recent studies document the importance of remaining forests to rural economies with non-timber products alone, generating between 16-26% of family incomes. Forests are clearly a key feature in our attempt at building a sustainable Sri Lanka, for ourselves and in the interest of mother earth. Our forests are also home, to some 3,000 Asian elephants, almost a fifth of the elephants on the Indian Subcontinent.
Forests in the past have also been cleared for agriculture. In particular, to set- up tea plantations. These tea plantations themselves are known today, to be good stores of carbon. Each year about 1,000 ha are reforested. In addition, about 2 million seedlings are distributed among local communities to enhance the sustenance of the tree cover in the country. Our Forest Department, working with support agencies and groups, have established many community forestry programs. In addition to natural forests, plantations of teak, eucalyptus, pinus and mahogany support the timber industry.
We in tourism are beneficiaries of the rich bio-diversity, the green positioning, and the efforts made by many in ensuring that we conserve and protect our environmental, social and cultural resources. It is both an advantage and a huge responsibility that is placed on us. For tourism, must ensure that we are able to have these resources in-tact. We need to ensure that we support the creation of jobs, enhancing the livelihoods of our people and communities, uplifting their status in society, bringing reasonable returns on investments made by entrepreneurs and offering a quality tourism product and services to our visitors. The question then is “What can we on our own and as the collective conscience of the world do, to ensure that we make a real and solid difference?â€. In tourism, little Sri Lanka has come up with a lead initiative, with a resolve to make the Island nation, a carbon neutral tourism destination. “Towards a Carbon Clean Sri Lanka: A Tourism Earth Lung†is the thrust we have initiated. I am happy that the initiative championed by Sri Lanka Tourism presented at the UNWTO/UNEP/WMO/ WEF 2nd Conference on Climate Change and Tourism in Davos, was recognised and is supported by the UNWTO.
True, it’s the little drops that make the ocean. But in this fast- forward world of ours today, little drops count little to mitigate the colossal mistakes made by us in perhaps, the last sixty years of human history. What we need today is strong assertive fast-forward action. We need action from tourism, that can dove-tail into the global movement on combating Global Warming…. touching all; focussing on the stark realities we face all around us. For this is not only about climate change…. but about our very future survival. It is about our survival as nations, economies, tourism destinations and as citizens of the world.
Thank You! London |
|||





Minister of Tourism, Sri Lanka , Millinda Moragoda, at the United Nation World Tourism Organization Ministerial Summit on Climate Change and Tourism, on 13 November 2007 at the World Travel Market London, UK