We love the genuinely ‘three pillar’ sustainable approach of Tasmania’s new 2030 Visitor Economy Strategy and Action Plan recognising economy, environment and community as equally essential elements for the destination managers to nurture and support.
The strategy prioritises the essential foundations for the visitor economy of
The strategy recognises that there are limits to growth on an island, such as accommodation, workforce and transport limits, and limits to the impacts from tourism that the natural environment can absorb. It acknowledges that aiming to go beyond such limits will negatively impact the visitor experience and the destination’s reputation.
We love the guiding values selected – ones that all stakeholders can connect to.
It was refreshing to see emissions reduction as the state’s #1 priority for tourism development – and instantly implemented with an initiative to help operators measure and reduce their emissions. This approach is aligned with the ever increasing desire of travellers to purchase sustainable tourism experiences.
Examples of actions in the strategy include
One missing element in the strategy is risk management and resilence planning for coping with the more intense and more frequent extreme weather events that Tasmanian destinations will have to cope with. Additionally, the context for the strategy is that Tasmanian tourism is dependent on flights (mostly long distance) which makes having a net zero target dependent on offsets, which cannot be a long term solution.
We loved to see the clear focus on different groups within the social side of the triple pillar approach to sustainability. Tourism Industry Council Tasmania has sought to address what positive impact can be provided to industry (operators and workers), Tasmanian communities, and visitors – and even to the State Government. We also loved the thoughtful acknowledgement of Tasmania’s Traditional Owners at the beginning of the document.
Examples from the strategy of how tourism can benefit residents includes
The strategy’s approach to growing visitor yield over visitor volume also had a unique tweak: “This is not just a question of how much money each person spends in Tasmania — the challenge is to invest more of that economic return into services and infrastructure to benefit visitors and Tasmanians travelling around our state.”
The approach to governance outlined in the strategy is also admirable. “We will bring industry, state and local government together with communities in managing destinations.” Tasmania’s T21 Steering Committee brings together Tasmanian Government agencies, the Tourism Industry Council of Tasmania and the Tasmanian Hospitality Association in a proven approach to destination management where government and industry come together to agree on shared priorities and measures of success for the industry and the destination. “Through T21, we look beyond election cycles, terms of government and market cycles to consider the type of investments, actions and policies that will enable our visitor economy to prosper in the years ahead.”
Our learnings from this strategy is that to the strategic plans we develop for clients we will
We find that most of our clients, such as our local government clients, aren’t yet implementing broadly emissions reduction activities.
As TICT says, “This is a decision we make every day.”
Read the 2030 VISITOR ECONOMY STRATEGY TASMANIA.
Learn how we support destinations.
Written by Kushla Gale, Tilma Group