Philippines Strives to Control Boom on Paradise Isle
PHILIPPINES: February 11, 2008
BORACAY, Philippines - It's getting crowded in paradise.
About 600,000 tourists came last year to Boracay in the central Philippines,
regarded as one of the world's best holiday destinations, and swam, ate and
slept on an island that has only about 18,000 full-time residents.
Arrivals should rise to about 670,000 this year, and pressure is mounting on
the island's infrastructure as more and more hotels and resorts are built to
cater for the boom.
The single narrow road that runs the length of Boracay is jam-packed, drain
pipes bring floodwater to the beach and hotel taps can suddenly run dry.
About 10 tonnes of garbage need to be treated and disposed of each day.
"It's really taken off (in terms of) congestion, overgrowth," said David
Light, a retired American actor who has been visiting Boracay for its
windsurfing since 1991.
"It was a pristine natural environment and I hated to see it change, but it
did."
Three decades ago, Boracay was the legendary secret destination for a
generation of backpackers, pretty much deserted, with stunning beaches, a
few huts and only basic facilities.
Now, over 150 hotels and restaurants are crowded along the 5-km (3-mile)
White Beach, renowned for its soft, powdery sand and the clear blue water
that it gently descends into. Other parts of the island are less crowded but
may be getting there.
The government, concerned that the crown jewel of its tourism brochures is
getting shopworn, is trying to step in but with limited success.
Environment Secretary Lito Atienza announced a ban on construction on
Boracay in August, but it was not implemented until January, and then only
for new projects. The moratorium will stay in place at least until July. A
master plan for developing the island will be in place by then.
FRAGILE
"I feel that the island is very fragile," said Loubelle Cann, president of
the Boracay Foundation, a local business association.
"I don't really know how much the island can carry in terms of physical
capacity so we are pushing that we should at least study these things
because you cannot just build and build and build."
Despite the moratorium, about 100 unfinished shops, hotels and restaurants
have been allowed to be completed and the noise of jackhammers, excavators
and power saws can be heard across the island.
These include a huge 183-room deluxe resort being built by Shangri-La north
of White Beach. The hotel will cost $100 million and will offer rooms
starting at $500 per night. It is expected to open by November this year.
Nearby, a hillside is being excavated to build the Alta Vista resort while
the Shangri-La's staff quarters are being constructed across the street.
But still, there's no let up on the boatloads of tourists who cross from the
main Panay island through the day.
White Beach, despite the crowds, is clean, and all buildings are a maximum
two storeys high, lower than the coconut palms that fringe the sands. Unlike
beaches elsewhere in the world, it remains safe at night and there are no
overt signs of sleaze or drugs.
"It's nice," said Roger Mestric, a Frenchman from Nantes who was on the
island with his wife after visits to China and Cambodia.
"It's not particularly crowded. From an ecologist's point of view,
Martinique (in the Caribbean) is better, but you can live here easily."
The government and the resort-owners, residents say, have to find the
balance between controlling expansion, providing infrastructure, offering
facilities and retaining some mystique.
It's not the big resorts like the Shangri-La or the Alta Vista that are the
problem, they say, it's the smaller buildings which sometimes block natural
waterways or do not have proper sewage or waste disposal.
And there is never an easy answer for those who hanker for the good old
days.
"Some people moan that it was much better 20 years ago," said Victor Ocskai,
a German who owns a resort on the beach. "And then they want cold beer,
running hot water and air-conditioning.
"Twenty years ago, it was quiet, but there was no cold beer."
(Editing by Megan Goldin)
Story by Raju Gopalakrishnan
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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