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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Kumar Sambhav <[email protected]>
Date: 11 July 2012 12:01
Subject: [forestrights] Tour operators to part with 10 per cent of turnover
for wildlife, forest dwellers
To: [email protected], [email protected]


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 Published on *Down To Earth* (http://www.downtoearth.org.in)

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Wildlife tour operators, resorts to shell out conservation fee
Author(s):
 Kumar Sambhav Shrivastava
  Issue Date:
 2012-7-11

Fund so collected will be spent on conserving forests, managing
human-wildlife conflict and developing livelihood for local communities

[image: Tour operators and resorts near national parks and sanctuaries will
have to pay at least 10 per cent of their turnover as conservation fee
(Photo: Sayantoni Palchoudhuri)]* (Photo: Sayantoni Palchoudhuri)*

Hoteliers and tour operators who have been cashing in on wildlife tourism
without bothering about local communities and resources might finally have
to part with a good share of their profit for wildlife and forest dwellers.
The Union Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) has decided that
hotels and resorts within a five kilometre radius of national parks and
sanctuaries should be charged a minimum 10 per cent of their turnover as
local conservation fee. The fund thus collected will be spent by states on
conservation of forest resources, managing human-wildlife conflict and
developing livelihood for local communities.

The move comes in the backdrop of a Supreme Court case where the apex court
is considering whether tourism should be allowed in the core areas of tiger
reserves. In March last year, Bhopal based non-profit Prayatna filed a
public interest petition in the apex court, pleading that critical tiger
habitats should be kept inviolate of all kinds of human disturbances,
including tourism. The National Tiger Conservation Authority of the
ministry supported the petition, saying tourism should be phased out from
the core areas. Regulated tourism can be allowed in the buffer areas, it
said. The court, however, directed the ministry to finalise the eco-tourism
guidelines for the protected areas, due since June last year before it
would decide the matter.

*MoEF finalises eco-tousim guidelines*

In the new guidelines, finalised on June 12, the ministry has reiterated
that tourism should be phased out gradually from the core areas. As an
interim measure, it suggested that for tiger reserves with the core areas
of more than 500 sq km, community-based tourism can be allowed in a maximum
of 20 per cent of the core zone. In return, 30 per cent of the buffer area
will have to be restored as wildlife habitat. For core areas smaller than
500 sq km, 10 percent of the core can be opened for tourism subject to the
condition that 20 per cent of such area is restored as wildlife habitat.

The ministry told the court that the mushrooming of high-end tourist
facilities around protected areas in recent years has led to exploitation,
degradation, disturbance and misuse of fragile ecosystems, causing “further
alienation of local people”. The guidelines, thus, aim to make  tourism in
such areas community-based and community-driven. “Any core area in a tiger
reserve from which relocation has been carried out will not be used for
tourism activities. Forest dwellers who have been relocated will be given
priority in terms of livelihood generation through community-based
eco-tourism,” the guidelines say. Local home stays will be exempted from
the conservation fee.

The guidelines prescribe roles and responsibilities for the state
governments, protected area managements and the resort owners. They direct
the states to formulate eco-tourism strategy within one year to ensure
local community participation and benefit-sharing and ensure that forest
and wildlife is conserved in the ecologically sensitive areas and in the
critical wildlife corridors. A state-level steering committee under the
chief minister, which would include the chief wildlife warden and
representatives of local communities, tribal welfare department, Panchayati
Raj institutions and civil society institutions, will periodically review
this strategy.
*
Guidelines subject to court approval*

The guidelines say every protected area should have an eco-tourism plan
which demarcates the area open for tourism, estimates carrying capacity of
the area and fixes the number of tourists accordingly and sets in place a
monitoring mechanism to asses impact of tourism. The guidelines say that
tourism infrastructure must be low key comprising low-impact architecture,
renewable, waste recycling, water management and made in a way sensitive to
the corridor value of the area. At least 50 per cent of the energy of the
resorts should be generated from renewable sources. The guidelines say a
local advisory committee of the officials at the division/district level,
local experts and community members should be formed to monitor the
practices of the resort owners. The implementation of these guidelines
will, however, be subject to the Supreme Court's final order.


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*Source URL:*
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/content/wildlife-tour-operators-resorts-shell-out-conservation-fee


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Kumar Sambhav Shrivastava,
Correspondent,
Down to Earth
+91-9911998304

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