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Today is World Tourism Day Tourism and Water: Protecting our Common Future Tourism is putting increasing demands on the quality, availability and accessibility of freshwater worldwide. However it also creates many jobs. Can we strike a balance? Source: WET Report Picture: John Hickey on flickr
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Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Dec 18, 2014

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Page 1: Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Today is World Tourism Day

Tourism and Water: Protecting our Common FutureTourism is putting increasing demands on the quality, availability and accessibility of freshwater worldwide. However it also creates many

jobs. Can we strike a balance?

Source: WET Report Picture: John Hickey on flickr

Page 2: Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Villages of the DammedCan resettled communities on the Mekong River thrive?

One billion people will vacation abroad this year, many travelling to less developed countries in Africa and Asia

Source: WET report Picture: Tim Copeland on flickr

Page 3: Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Villages of the DammedCan resettled communities on the Mekong River thrive?

Half of all international tourists visit a wetland area. Lake Nakuru in Kenya alone attracts 300,000 visitors a year.

Source: Ramsar Picture: Joachim Huber on flickr

Page 4: Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Villages of the DammedCan resettled communities on the Mekong River thrive?

In the Ba Bể Lake wetland in Vietnam, tourism contributes $20,000 to the local economy and indirectly improves local livelihoods by up

to $1000 annually per household.Source: Ramsar Picture: faboulousfabs on flickr

Page 5: Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Villages of the DammedCan resettled communities on the Mekong River thrive?

A four star hotel in Bali needs 50,000 liters of clean water every day. But half of Bali’s population has inadequate access to water

and sanitation.Source: The Jakarta Post Picture: dave on flickr

Page 6: Tourism and water: Protecting our common future

Villages of the DammedCan resettled communities on the Mekong River thrive?

Tourism needs water, but demand is rising, threatening supplies to local communities. Learn more about IWMI’s research on equitable

water allocation.

Picture: David Brazier/IWMI