The crowds around the Mona Lisa are so bad that museum workers walked out recently claiming the working conditions were too dangerous.
Instagrammers created safety hazards during the poppy super-bloom in California.
Historic cities inundated by tourists. Sensitive habitat destroyed.
Monuments damaged. This phenomenon is known as
over-tourism, and it's affecting the planet in unprecedented ways.
There's a way in which
tourists can alter the experience of visiting something such that they ruin the very experience that they've been trying to have.
That's the essential condition of over-tourism.
I would put tourism in the large bucket of things that people do that have been made possible now with fossil fuels.
Historically tourism was only for a small wealthy elite
in fact
It was common to stay within 50 or 100 miles of where you grew up.
European nobles or very upper income people would go on grand tours in Europe.
There is also religious travel. However, you didn't have the kind of "let's go take a Disney vacation" type thing until the 20th century
As Western societies gained a middle-class
tens of millions of people could suddenly afford to travel and mass tourism began and that's what's happening again today with
rapidly developing countries.
In the last thirty years or so
you've had the emergence of this global middle class that has come out of middle-income countries. So Brazil,
Mexico, China, India, where millions of people have achieved
this wage level where they're also able to travel.
Overseas trips from China alone rose from 10 million to a hundred and fifty million in under two decades and
globally, we've gone from 25 million to
1.4 billion trips today.
But that's not the only factor, budget airlines like Ryanair allowed tourists to fly cheap bleep and
Airbnb has increased the supply of lodgings.
And the rise of Instagram across the world has spurred over-tourism in a big way.
Social media has provided a way for people to find out places to go, things to do, things to see, and in some cases,
has also really eroded the tourist experience.
People show up to try to take the same selfie of what they had seen online, which is a very very new thing.
In a few tragic cases this phenomenon has even led to injury and death.
In response to over tourism, many cities are starting to tax tourists more heavily and put daily limits on cruise ship visitors,
and regulating Airbnbs so that locals aren't priced out of their own cities
But it's even more challenging to mitigate the effects of all this travel on climate change.
The biggest part of any trip is the flight. Just from one flight from New York to London and back
you're doing about a third of the damage that a car does over the course of a whole year.
And cruise ships aren't much better.
Ships are one of the most efficient ways you could move across the surface of the earth,
but they're using one of the dirtiest fuels.
Climate activist Greta Thunberg made a statement by choosing to take a six-day journey on a carbon-neutral
schooner rather than fly across the Atlantic, and in Europe the "flight shame" movement has taken hold.
Should we all be expected to follow their lead?
The pros for flying are that it's absolutely amazing,
and there's no parallel for it in all of human history.
It is not the inherent fault of individuals that the planet is warming.
It's the fault of how we run our energy system, and there are people in charge of it and they've made decisions that force us
all to emit, and in fact,
they are very happy when we talk about individual responsibility because it takes the focus off the massive
systematic decisions that got us to this place.
Alongside the problems there are upsides to tourism like global connection and financial investments in the places that need it.
I don't think that we can put a value on the fact that so many people get to go see so much of the world's
wonders, and I think that we do have some evidence that that might change people. It may make them more open
to other cultures, other experiences.
Tourism as a general point is a really great and amazing thing, and this is just one of the dark sides of it.
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