Mexico’s tourism policy threatening environment
May 27th, 2010 - 10:16 am ICT by IANSMexico City, May 27 (IANS/EFE) Mexico’s tourism policy, which promotes development of enormous hotels in remote areas, produces an over-exploitation of natural resources and a “collapse” of the ecosystem, a leading environmentalist has said.
The tourism model applied in Mexico “over the last few decades consists of choosing a site and developing it until all the natural resources are gone, so that for years afterwards these areas are basically in a state of collapse,” oceanographer Octavio Aburto, who works with US-based Scripps Research Institute, said Tuesday.
Mexican authorities have since long promoted construction in tourist destinations such as Cancun, Huatulco, Los Cabos and Ixtapa, where enormous complexes comprising hotels, marinas, shopping malls, housing and golf courses are being planned in previously pristine areas.
Aburto, who has been involved in ocean studies around Baja California and the shores of tourist cities like Cancun since the mid-1990s, says: “The whole system of beaches connected to coastal wetlands such as mangrove swamps has been totally disrupted, however much the authorities might want to hide the fact.”
Cancun, a city created a mere 40 years ago and now home to 700,000 people, has more than 30,000 hotel rooms and is Mexico’s leading tourist destination.
Last year the government invested more than $70 million to recover some 16 km of beaches in Cancun, Cozumel and Playa del Carmen after they were swept away by hurricanes. The government brought in 6.1 million cubic metres of sand dredged from the bottom of the sea for the purpose.
“Today it’s very difficult for us to maintain what in theory we sold to tourists: paradisiacal beaches and mangroves,” Aburto said.
“Now we spend people’s tax money to pay for dredging sandbanks, so that next season the hurricanes can sweep away the same sand, because the mangroves that warded off the winds and kept the beaches from eroding have been destroyed,” he said.
The oceanographer also said Mexican authorities continue giving out permits to build tourist infrastructure despite “a series of outrageous infractions against environmental law (and) glaring gaps of information” in environmental impact studies.
–IANS/EFE
pmb
- Cruise giant to invest over $150 mn in Mexico - Mar 16, 2012
- Mexican city Cancun is big revenue earner - Apr 22, 2010
- Mexico begins restoration of beaches after hurricane - Nov 03, 2009
- Two brothers rescued after three months at sea - Feb 18, 2012
- Mexico has special place in my heart: Banderas - Feb 03, 2012
- Shark attacks tourist in Mexico - Feb 02, 2011
- Gang that cloned credit cards busted in Mexico - Feb 11, 2010
- Greenpeace launches campaign against Mexican resort project - Mar 15, 2012
- Mexican taxi driver rewarded for honesty - Jan 28, 2011
- Three killed in Mexico violence - Dec 09, 2010
- Eight killed in fire-bombing in Mexico - Sep 01, 2010
- Ex `Survivor' producer arraigned in Mexico for wife's murder - Feb 16, 2012
- Mexican politician becomes first to wear ankle monitor - Jul 22, 2011
- American wanted for child rape arrested in Mexico - Mar 11, 2012
- Six mutilated bodies found in Mexico - Jun 08, 2010
Tags: bottom of the sea, cancun cozumel, coastal wetlands, cubic metres, environmentalist, exploitation of natural resources, huatulco, los cabos, mangrove swamps, mexican authorities, mid 1990s, ocean studies, playa del carmen, pristine areas, sandbanks, scripps research institute, shopping malls, tax money, tourism policy, tourist cities