Developing Marine Ecotourism for a Sustainable Blue Economy: A Literature Review

Date
2021-03-31
Authors
Thorburn, E
Milne, S
Deuchar, C
Supervisor
Item type
Commissioned Report
Degree name
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Publisher
Sustainable Seas National Science Challenge.
Abstract

Overview

Before Covid-19, tourism contributed 9.8% GDP, $40.9 billion and 14.4% national employment (StatsNZ, 2019). While Covid-19 has diminished the country’s most valuable export sector (tourism), it is also a catalyst to develop these types of activities.

Our extensive coastline and unique marine environment places Aotearoa New Zealand in an excellent position to develop marine ecotourism that embraces regenerative principles and supports a blue economy. But our understanding of marine ecotourism and how it connects to the blue economy is lacking. Marine ecotourism is an area often overlooked by policy makers and the connections to the spiritual, cultural, social, environmental, and economic well-being of communities is largely unexplored.

To develop marine ecotourism activity that embraces regeneration and supports a blue economy, we need to understand where we are now, where we want to go, and how we will get there.

Drawing on mātauranga Māori, this project aims to develop marine ecotourism from low impact ecosystem-based management (EBM) principles. Innovative approaches will be adopted to identify, investigate, and achieve the desired outcomes. Key to this is forming a network that enables cross-sectoral learning and can drive and enact change.

We will work in partnership with iwi, industry, government and community, to:

establish a baseline of marine ecotourism activity co-create an actionable definition construct collaborative measures for ‘success’ and test this in North and South Island case studies. This research will include wānanga with case communities and mātauranga experts in factors that contribute to te Taiao, and participation in existing marine ecotourism activities. An iterative process of adaption and collaboration across sectors and cultures will enable knowledge exchange and learning to develop tools and frameworks that support the development of marine ecotourism.

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Source
Growing marine ecotourism: Developing marine ecotourism that embraces regenerative principles and supports a blue economy. Retrieved from: https://www.sustainableseaschallenge.co.nz/our-research/growing-marine-ecotourism/
DOI
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