|
An
adventure tour through the world's largest cave Son Doong in
A half-cocked plan to build a gondola lift to Son Doong, the
world’s largest cave, in
On
Wednesday, the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism released a dispatch
charging that the cable car project lacked sufficient input from experts at
the
“Therefore,
the construction of the cable car cannot be incorporated into the aggregate
planning of the
The communiqué had been sent to the
Ministry of Construction following widespread public outrage about the
provincial government's efforts to ramrod the plan into action.
Big
plan
UNESCO
recognized Phong Nha – Ke Bang National Park as a global heritage site in
2003. Years later, a local man led a British team into
The cave,
which contains at least 150 individual grottos, a dense subterranean jungle,
and several underground rivers became known as the world's largest cave.
The five-kilometer-long Son Doong is
150 meters high and 200 meters wide. It took over as the world’s largest from
Late last
month, Quang Binh’s provincial leaders revealed plans to build a
US$212-million cable car system that would end somewhere inside Son Doong.
The
north-central province tapped the Sun Group, a real estate and resort
developer in the central city of
During a
press briefing held on November 4, local authorities described plans to build
a 10.6km, two-section cable car system linking Tien Son and Son Doong caves.
The initial
design called for 30 intermediary cable support towers that would each occupy
around 10 square meters and buttress a 360-degree camera to help alert park
staff of forest fires or other threats.
The plan
sparked fierce opposition from civil society and conservation groups as well
as tourists. As of press time, nearly 65,000 people from all over the world
have signed a petition in protest of the project.
Its
defenders say the cable car will make it easier for tourists to explore the
cave, giving local tourism a much-needed boost that would increase revenues
and create jobs.
Problems
arise
But those in
the opposing camp say that the proposal's much-touted benefits pale in
comparison to its possible drawbacks.
The
naysayers point to a lack of preliminary studies on the geographical,
topographical and ecological impacts the system could have on the park. A
massive injection of tourists, they warn, could potentially wreak havoc on
Son Doong's structural integrity.
Worse still,
the conservationists say construction of the cable car could undermine
UNESCO's recognition of Phong Nha – Ke Bang National Park.
An
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) team was on a field
mission in September to gauge whether the park is eligible to have its world
heritage status renewed -- this time in recognition of its biodiversity.
Following
their visit, the ICUN team alerted UNESCO about the planned cable car system,
prompting the UN agency to request a thorough analysis of its potential
environmental impact.
UNESCO will
then dispatch another team to
“Since
UNESCO does not yet have complete information about the cable car project, it
is impossible for us to start guessing what impact it may have on the
preservation of the World Heritage site,” Roni Amelan, a UNESCO spokesperson,
told Thanh Nien News. “As to the World Heritage status of the site,
we cannot speculate about the future decisions the World Heritage Committee
may make when it receives all the information it needs.”
An
adventure tour through the world's largest cave Son Doong in
‘Not
a well thought-out plan’
First
discovered in 1991 by local resident Ho Khanh, Son Doong shot to
international fame in 2009 after being explored by members of the British
Cave Research Association with Khanh’s help.
Interest in
the cave has made the once-remote and bomb-ravaged province a major
destination where visitor numbers now rival established central destinations
like
The jewel in
the crown has always been Son Doong, which remains extremely hard to access.
Taxing,
multi-day hikes into the cave have only been offered by a single private
company, Oxalis Adventure Tours. Up until now, tourists willing to pay
thousands of dollars to take such a trip had to put their name on a one-year
waiting list.
It seemed
like the province was happy enough with the program.
Despite
several hiccups, it deemed a trial program run between August 2013 and August
2014 “successful.” During the one-year trial, 243 adventure travelers from 34
countries explored the cave on six-day trips that cost each of them $3,000.
But in a
bizarre about-face, Quang Binh authorities have promoted the cable car
project as a silver bullet to lift locals out of abject poverty.
Conservationists
are not buying it.
They say in
a country where provincial leaders are too-often evaluated by GDP growth
alone, environmental concerns are likely to be sidelined in the design and
construction of something like a cable car system.
“I
understand Quang Binh authorities want to development their province, but a
cable car built by an outside investor at a cost of $200 million, which is a
huge amount of money … is not a well-thought out plan,” Pamela McElwee, an
assistant professor of human ecology at Rutgers University who has
extensively researched Vietnam's protected areas, told Thanh Nien News.
“How will
they recoup this huge investment? By selling $10 tickets? Unlikely,” she
said.
A smarter
idea, according to McElwee, would be to raise the quality of tourism
services provided in Quang Binh. She recalled a recent Thanh Nien News piece detailing several tourists (both
foreign and local) who had been harassed and made to feel unwelcome.
“That is
something Quang Binh authorities need to fix to attract more people,” she
said.
The big
'no-no'
The tourism
ministry’s abrupt objection to the cable car project indicates that Quang
Binh's leadership pushed for it apparently without securing approval from
national authorities.
Other than
the tourism ministry, the government’s news website has also run several
articles criticizing the project and questioning its feasibility.
In a piece
posted on the site on November 1, Tran Hoang Mai, an official at the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, was quoted as saying that UNESCO often threatens to
de-list World Heritage sites facing threats and alluded to the possibility that
Phong Nha – Ke Bang faces a similar threat.
Not
surprisingly, the idea of building a huge infrastructure project designed to
draw as many visitors as possible to a carefully protected ecological wonder
has not gone over well with conservationists.
“If the
province bothered to upgrade training and services for tourism, such as
professional guides who can help tourists understand the area, they could get
tourists to stay longer and spend more money, which would raise employment
and bring more tax revenue to the province,” McElwee said.
“
|
Thứ Tư, 12 tháng 11, 2014
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)


Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét