Southern
Europe is sick of tourists
Water
scarcity, overcrowded streets and rising housing costs are infuriating locals.
August 28,
2024 4:24 am CET
By Ketrin
Jochecová
https://www.politico.eu/article/southern-europe-sick-tourists-sustainability-housing-water/
Rome,
Barcelona and Athens have had it with holidaymakers.
While the
Covid-19 pandemic provided a welcome respite to many locals from the hoards of
travelers flying in, troublesome tourists are once again getting on their
nerves.
So much so,
that locals and activists have been hitting the streets in various cities
across Spain, Italy, Portugal and Greece, some armed with water guns and
stickers telling rowdy visitors to go home.
Protestors
say over-tourism drives up housing prices, accelerates gentrification and makes
already-stretched water supplies more scarce. In drought-stricken urban centers
like Barcelona, tourists consume considerably more water than the average
resident. In parched Sicily, a number of cities have started to turn away
tourists due to water scarcity.
Governments,
for their part, are less inclined to implement durable measures. For many EU
countries, especially those in southern Europe, tourism is a key pillar of
their economy: 11.3 percent for Croatia, and between 6 and 8 percent for
Portugal, Greece, Spain and Italy, according to an analysis by Allianz.
After the
pandemic all but halted tourism for two years, people eager to travel embarked
on so-called “revenge tourism" — reaping back the trips they had missed
out on.
In part due
to tourism, Spain, Portugal, and Greece — long the laggards among Europe’s big
economies — outperformed the rest of the EU in 2023. While GDP across the bloc
rose at 0.5 percent, the economies of Portugal, Greece and Spain all posted
rates above 2 percent.
“What we are
seeing in the media is what we started to see even before the pandemic,"
Sandra Carvão, director of market intelligence, policies and competitiveness at
the United Nations' tourism agency told POLITICO.
"Already
then, we saw a movement and protests against tourism in destinations, and we
see them returning,” she said.
Rising
temperatures, fraying tempers
Toward the
end of July, around 20,000 anti-tourism activists gathered in Palma de
Mallorca, demanding a change to a tourism model they say is harming Balearic
Islands, whose main three isles are Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza.
In 2023, the
total number of tourists on the islands rose to 14.4 million — an overwhelming
amount for the islands that have a year-round total population of around 1.2
million residents.
In
Barcelona, activists sprayed foreign visitors with water pistols at a
smaller-scale protest. Spain’s tourism minister condemned the action, saying
that they did not represent the country’s culture of hospitality. In streets
and public spaces across Spain, stickers and graffiti referencing “guiris,” a
mildly derogatory colloquial term for tourists who have trouble respecting
local laws and culture.
Similar
anti-tourism protests have taken place this summer in cities across Spain,
including in Madrid, Malaga, Granada, and Alicante. Outside of Spain, tourist
hotspots like Portugal, Italy and Greece have been experiencing protests of
various degrees.
A problem
bigger than selfie bans
Cities have
been fighting over-tourism with fines, fees and bans — to varying degrees of
success.
Some have
implemented smaller rules to deter tourists: no selfies in areas of the Italian
city of Portofino, no sitting on the Spanish steps in Rome, no large cruise
ships in Croatia's Dubrovnik or Greece's Santorini, and no flip-flops in Cinque
Terre.
In Venice,
authorities introduced a symbolic €5 entry fee to limit the number of tourists.
The measure, however, backfired, instead fomenting further protest from locals
who claimed the city has been transformed into a theme park.
Some are
betting bigger: Barcelona's mayor announced in June that the city will shut
down short-term apartment rentals to tourists by 2028, in a bid to avoid the
worst of Europe's burgeoning housing shortages. In the past decade, the Canary
Islands, alongside the cities of Berlin and Lisbon have approved similar
measures.
According to
Carvão, a successful tourism strategy needs to focus on the balance of
economic, social and environmental impact and has to take into account the
level of demand as well as the carrying capacity of the destination (in terms
of the size of the city, infrastructure, or resources).
Carvão cited
Amsterdam as an example of a city on a good path to getting tourism under
control.
The city,
which has gained a reputation as Europe’s party capital, banned smoking weed in
its red light district, and launched a stay-away campaign targeting young,
rowdy British men only visiting to party. Most recently, it also announced a
ban on the construction of new hotels.
In contrast
to other destinations clamping down on travelers, some have chosen a more open
approach: Copenhagen is offering rewards to encourage climate-friendly tourist
behavior. Those who ride a bike, take public transport, or collect trash in the
city might earn anything from a complimentary cup of coffee to a free entrance
to a museum.
“The
strategy needs to be a compound of three aspects. You need data on movement,
the governance of actively listening to the residents, and the third one is a
combination of different policies,” Carvão said.
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