4h) Tourism and leisure
Release date | 16/06/2009 |
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Many people regularly visit parks, green areas, forests and other natural areas, including Belgian protected areas and natural reserves to enjoy nature and observe wildlife. Some of our most attractive destinations encompass the sea coast and the polders (for example the Zwin and the Westhoek), heaths and peat bogs (for example Kalmthout, the Hautes-Fagnes and the Ziepbeek Valley), ponds and marshes (for example the Zwarte Beek Valley, the Haine Valley, Harchies and Virelles), limestone hills (for example the Meuse escarpments and the Viroin Valley), natural caves and caverns (for example Han-sur-Lesse, Remouchamps, La Merveilleuse and Hotton), and woods and forests (for example the Meerdaelwoud, the Hertogenwald, the Sonian Forest and the Anlier-Rulles Forest).
The development of tourism in natural and protected areas and other nature-based destinations is a source of increasing stress on fragile ecosystems. Its social, economic and environmental impacts are immense and complex. In the absence of appropriate policies and plans, tourism to natural areas may have a negative impact on biodiversity.
The challenge is to ensure that tourism is developed in harmony with environmental considerations. Sustainable tourism can generate employment and income, thus providing an incentive for conservation. Tourism policies should therefore be formulated and implemented in a way that generates incentives and revenues to cover a share of the costs of managing and protecting marine and terrestrial protected areas. Sustainable tourism can also raise public awareness of the many goods and services provided by biodiversity.
Worth mentioning here is the EU expert meeting "Natura 2000 and Leisure" in 2004 where the participants shared their experiences and approaches to nature and recreation. The report "Jewels in the crown - Good practices Natura 2000 and leisure" illustrates the synergies existing between recreation and protected Natura 2000 areas.
Another challenge is the development of knowledge on carrying capacity and the raising of consciousness among Belgian tourists abroad and foreign tourists in BelgiumThe Commission has published in 2003 a communication laying down basic orientations for the sustainability of European tourism (COM/2003/0716)33. This communication addresses current and future possibilities of community intervention in tourism, makes an analysis of the european situation and its difficulties and establishes orientations for the future.
*CBD instrument
The Guidelines on Biodiversity and Tourism Development were adopted in 2004 to help Parties in the promotion of sustainable tourism (CBD Decision VII/14). They were conceived as a practical tool providing technical guidance to policy-makers, decision-makers and managers with responsibilities covering tourism and/or biodiversity, whether in national or local government, the private sector, local communities, non-governmental organisations or other organisations, as to ways of working together with key stakeholders involved in tourism and biodiversity. The implementation of the guidelines will help make tourism and biodiversity more mutually supportive, engage the private sector and local communities, and promote infrastructure and land-use planning based on the principles of conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.