Carbon tax threatens developing world, says eco leader

Wednesday, 07 May, 2009 0

NADI, Fiji – The carbon tax on British travellers proposed by the UK government is "a major blow to anti-poverty programmes in the developing world", says a development expert.

"At a time when we are encouraging European tourists to boost the economies of developing countries with their tourism resources, the UK government in a single move will deal a body blow to those of us trying to use sustainable tourism to alleviate poverty," said Lelei LeLaulu, president of the Island Nations Climate and Oceans Programme.

"Tourism is the largest voluntary flow of resources from the ‘haves’ to the ‘have-nots’ of the world," asserted LeLaulu, "and the UK’s Air Passenger Duty is about to choke that flow.

"Tourism plays a crucial role in the creation of employment, which is especially important during the current economic crisis," he added.

"If they wanted to help, the UK should give those levies to the poorer countries who are twisting and turning to feed their people during the global financial crisis," said LeLaulu, who is also a founding director of the World Tourism Forum for Peace and Sustainable Development (www.desti-nations.net).

"As it is, we have no idea where these monies will end up. Most likely in Treasury bailouts of UK banks – so why are we in the developing world paying for the excessive greed of Europe’s richest?" he queried.

"If they want to help boost the UK economy as well as help to fight poverty in faraway lands, UK Prime Minister Brown should offer cash incentives to British citizens to encourage them to dig into their savings accounts and buy tickets on UK airlines and with UK-owned travel agents.

“By so doing UK travellers will use their savings accounts to help revive the UK economy and those of destination countries, rather than smothering the travel urge with this huge wet blanket of a tax," said LeLaulu.

"Furthermore, in addition to stemming the flow of much needed tourism revenues for the island nations of the Pacific and Asia, the UK tax will adversely affect the attempts by long-haul carriers like Qantas, Virgin and Air New Zealand to cut their emissions through innovative technologies," said LeLaulu, who is also chairman of the Foundation of the Peoples of the South Pacific International.

 



 

profileimage

Ian Jarrett



Most Read

Vegas’s Billion-Dollar Secrets – What They Don’t Want Tourists to Know

Visit Florida’s New CEO Bryan Griffin Shares His Vision for State Tourism with Graham

Chicago’s Tourism Renaissance: Graham Interviews Kristin Reynolds of Choose Chicago

Graham Talks with Cassandra McCauley of MMGY NextFactor About the Latest Industry Research

Destination International’s Andreas Weissenborn: Research, Advocacy, and Destination Impact

Graham and Don Welsh Discuss the Success of Destinations International’s Annual Conference

Graham and CEO Andre Kiwitz on Ventura Travel’s UK Move and Recruitment for the Role

Brett Laiken and Graham Discuss Florida’s Tourism Momentum and Global Appeal

Graham and Elliot Ferguson on Positioning DC as a Cultural and Inclusive Global Destination

Graham Talks to Fraser Last About His England-to-Ireland Trek for Mental Health Awareness

Kathy Nelson Tells Graham About the Honour of Hosting the World Cup and Kansas City’s Future

Graham McKenzie on Sir Richie Richardson’s Dual Passion for Golf and His Homeland, Antigua
TRAINING & COMPETITION
Skip to toolbar
Clearing CSS/JS assets' cache... Please wait until this notice disappears...
Updating... Please wait...