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tv   The Future of Travel  Deutsche Welle  June 14, 2022 8:15pm-9:01pm CEST

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crane says the city of savannah, don yeske is and not completely cut off despite russian forces destroying all major roots out of the city. russia is urging ukrainian fighters to surrender, but ukrainian officials to say their troops are still holding out, and efforts are underway to evacuate civilians. coming up next, doc film finds out if tours him to exotic destinations can ever be sustainable given the climate emergency. or if we should all just holiday home to save of classes, layla rack will be here from the top, the next hour for me and the team can bring in, take care of this, and very soon we're all set to go beyond the obvious citizenship, a man we're all in, as we take on the way, we're all about the stories that matter to you. whatever it
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takes, policemen following w, fire made for mines. we all dream of holidays to relax or explore other parts of the world. yet tourism takes a toll on nature, cities and the climate. is it time to rethink out travel plans before we need structural change and a totally different approach? before corona's struck cities like dubrovnik, venice and barcelona were inundated with tourists leaving visitors, frustrated and local stressed. but changes of foot galloping down that we want quality tourism, which makes people fall in love with venice. they fall in love under the gaze of big brother, many towns and now using d. c t, v on
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a wide scale and we ourselves provide a vast amount of data. if we try to turn big data into small data and simply find networking data algorithms identify our needs and agencies provide the appropriate offers. yes, we're already airborne again, but can we still travel without feeling guilty? last rumble us bounced alone is famous pedestrian boulevard. and before corona a tourist hotspot, locals felt they were being drowned out by the tourist hordes and tony afoot, wera wants to give residents of voice through a new public radio station. yeah, because i live here and enjoy getting to know my name is myra. anyway,
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it's often said that li, city dwellers don't even know lives next door when a self of mine. but i know lots of people in my neighborhood, yoga when it for so am i going thought i knew i had hired. well, it's antonia. see then what does the future hold for a city that attracted 21000000 visitors in 2019. that's 13 tourists for every one resident. it's hard to imagine there was any room on the rumbler for locals, as i know that's not change, and some people still live here and you'll get to meet one of them. he's called at work is low. i got up when i shot him. oh hi edward as things. how cool is that high? is it the japanese greeting today? yes, japanese. edward eli as villa is a member of the s o s, ramblers association. he's fighting to prevent the complete sell out of the
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boulevard. during the pandemic, he took part in an unusual project. he rang each doorbell on the 1.2 kilometer avenue to find out who still lives there. the result was shocking. officially 700 people reside here, but the association found no more than 70 we again, i guess today is a resident of the ramblers. they say no one lives here anymore, but we have living proof that's not true. right. edward bella, and one of the last resistance fighters, you are. what was it like here? last year, when there were hardly any tourists on the rambling, i'm letting him, but i was gonna, i had the video, what came to light was something we've complained about for years. lamar, with the massive visits is gone, but it suddenly became clear how big the differences between life with and without tourists or sinister. now every one can see that i am like
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it became dramatically obvious that in districts which lived solely from tourism, it's not just neighbors that are missing. you can't find a single bakery pharmacy or grocery store either. i think the whole length of the listing, in my view, the tourist industry is extremely destructive, destiny and tourism can ruin a place and make it worthless. wonderful. and then a part of the industry just looks for the next place. and what's left when the tourists have gone, a corpse, it can take a lot longer than another hour. many of the small shops that borderless ramblers still haven't come back to life with only a few tourists around it's not worth opening. and some businesses didn't survive. the locked down. lots of apartments in the area are also empty. most served as
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holiday accommodation. now relics of the past years ago, barcelona ins launched protests at the growing number of vacation apartments. living space had grown scarce and many could no longer afford the rising rents in their neighborhoods. tourists go home was their response. the men took their concerns seriously. and thank god sent me leave since identified at 7200 illegal tourist apartments. bullshit, we've achieved what seemed impossible and but the air b and b and other platforms have removed a thousands of legal accommodations from their websites that only the adverts which had fueled property, speculation, and caused resentment amongst residents. and we've also regulated new hotel construction laboratory hotel construction is actually banned in the city center because there's already enough agony on mars with space in the city center limited
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. barcelona has been spreading out into surrounding areas like pablo now, a former industrial and working class neighborhood. it's transformation began 2 decades ago with the opening of a university, a new housing projects. the city is wooing companies to create more jobs here. and barcelona opened its design museum next to pablo, now's landmark, taught a glorious skyscraper in 2014. but what about tourists august novel and free as davids of schools with us. but if we don't want to create a cultural scene, specifically for tourists, sierra yaki that we want tourists to take an interest in what interest of the people of barcelona. and that's our goal goes. so we have to create a scene for resident shows, olga, and this will automatically make tourists interested and receiver, or will you feel mvr, fellows, muslims, hobbler now is just 20 minutes from the city center. barcelona is applying the
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smart city concept to its development. the area around the design museum is now home to attractive living space, once known as the cattle and manchester. pablo now is betting that innovative architecture and culture will please residence and visitors alike. others and them dinner go, emilio, my we have to broaden our tourist horizon and diversity and decentralize the streams of tourism center. the do we need to make funds available and develop new tourism field and give it like culture lord and ecology rose. then we can change tourism logics. got by them come yeah. oh but ram elderly is my girl ah. inst. kenyatta is also curious about tourism influence on towns and cities, a 3rd generation pub in our residence. his grandmother worked as a seamstress in a factory here. though he likes culture,
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he fears that the change is a stripping problem now of its charm. we haven't even got a look at here and when i was small, this was an industrial area. they as well, not a magnet for tourists day. now a man, if you saw a stranger the briefcase, i knew he was last, that aretha the idea of decentralized. some series of other simply means spreading the problems to the rest of the city. lemme ask, am think what i want to have with us with that are going journalist with athletic standard. valerie thought that human sugar knowledge or mental illness, i disagree. the decentralization means diverting streams of tourists so that there are fewer tourists for area as well. so if barcelona people visit fashion workshops and probably new tourists will follow suit to, he says he, if they don't, then neither will tourists. and that's the issue about how can i, as a resident influence decisions taken by visitors to my city field work. that's the key, and it was like global leveled. tourists currently have focused on just 30 percent
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. his boss alone is total area, and millions are always drawn to the same sites. hobbler now has its own rambler. locals are worried that soon their boulevard 2 will be full of tourists, elbowing them out. but wouldn't visitors bring money into the neighbourhood? algorithm intel to reason i can think of gross in tourism in recent years has not led to an improvement in living conditions. here, i know like, while tourist industry jobs are insecure with very low wages and poor working conditions, maestro's a lot of outsourcing and part time contracts are like that for the majority of local residents, our tourism only has negative aspects. terrific. i see a lot of that and only then up on that or much o n as that are on israel available as you like barcelona many international tourist hotspots, face
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a dilemma. how can they fulfill the needs of residents while being economically dependent on tourism? and it would be great to see the rambling, again, become a boulevard for residents. naturally, visitors should also be welcome here, but not thousands of them. it will knock out going in melissa for, for us pollen bunny miss as by alice does, will disagree. maybe we all believe that the problem is the masses got, that's why we're against more tourists. it would help us if in the future there were no more or at least far fewer cheap flights. otherwise, the problem will persist, have a low cost set on dilemma. the total number of flights world wide rows to 47000000 in 2019 or 1500000000. vacationers? nothing it seemed. could stop them. but then came coven 19 and locked downs, a time devoid of any good news?
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well, not quite. at the new climate instituting cologne, professor nicholas hannah, evaluate global studies on climate change, daughters to settle this will, since tourism has taken a break, even of air traffic emissions have dropped significantly on. so that's good for the climate hour, but also upon them. it's over here. we expect foss wistar flying again from maybe even more than before. no frills carriers are already attracting passengers with bargain offers barcelona for 12 euros $99.00 paris to venice for a me a 14 euros $99.00 price dumping has taken up where it left off how kerosene remains. tax free mac windows. i can't imagine tax free dr. austin, railroads to pay tax on our letter traffic doesn't with good friends, effectively subsidize on this is good. that is actually counterproductive and by rights should be stopped immediately for years now,
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the european union's attempts to change kerosene laws have failed because the member states cannot agree. but the pace of climate change is making the issue more and more urgent. as we mussman. consequently, we have to come up with alternative statement and one possible solution to synthetic fuel. osman electricity is obtained from renewable energy ahmed, and used to produce a liquid fuel which can be burnt quite normally in turbines. in contortion for chris, renewable fuels are technically feasible, but still too expensive. so compared to basil rail travel, for instance, flying steel generates high emissions along whole flight producers around 3 tons of c o. 2 per passenger to knows a few carbon dioxide emissions from cruise ships are also extremely high. approximately 3 tons per week. about the same as a carliette road through ingrafila. i'm gonzales yelling out fun.
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before corona up to 10 cruise ships sailed into venice each day. and up to 20000 tourists went ashore. not only to these giant vessels admit vast quantities of pollutants, their wakes also damaged the foundations of local buildings, most of which are built on wooden piles. companies still use venice as the highlight of their cruises, sailing past st. mark's square at daybreak. it's like something out of a fairy tale. but venice itself doesn't profit much from this kind of tourism. the docking fees go to rome, and the passengers eat and sleep on board. and some tour operators report their earnings in tax havens like panama. but venice is head of tourism is still glad to see visitors returning. ah,
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did i mean that you die for mother? at last? there is life in the city again after a difficult here. people here can again lead normal lives, and many of them have been hard head that was done before the pandemic venice was overrun with tourists 30000000 each year. many were day trippers, all with the same agenda. c st. mark's square ride in a gondola, crossed the re alto bridge by a souvenir, and then leave in the evening. i ran to look down. i can wait a minute if during lockdown, venice set up an operation center linked to hundreds of cameras and sensors all over the city. ah, changing miami from accommodating to maybe some saudi. as a result. we now know how many people are coming and going every minute around the stumble. shane, the slope is in the ah, the data is evaluated in
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a smart control room. the city plans to use its observations to guide the masses of visitors and stagger the number of tourists at hot spots. on the day of our visit, $20000.00 tourists were in the city. 40 percent german information from phone companies is used to determine nationality. since nearly everyone has a cellphone, the phone number can be identified on arrival. crystal guarantee shanker, this makes venice one of the safest cities in the world. although somebody might be watching free hot spots, enable us to quickly find something on a smartphone when we are abroad. ah, bill in network activists mock was beckett out worries about the digital traces. we
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leave. he monitors the security of private data on the internet as be date of her daughter, guess my, the thir league data refers to the vast amount of data that can be sifted through classified and used to draw conclusions on truth of. and that is interesting for each individual sector. ours are big data is changing, tourism in so far as totally new possibilities are emerging, are completely new scenarios and foil, but also totally new risks where we talk very little about what he bits of in this kitchen. when we view a website, often we simply accept the long data protection declaration without reading it. this makes us easy to track for algorithms that it becoming better and better acquainted with our behavior and our holiday wishes.
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detritus decides to target please, and via the tourist of today is transparent home because as a rule, we do all on bookings, my, the internet 5 on this enables a large number of companies to gather information on us. you bought and draw conclusions as to our preferences and our personality as really, usually with the aim of presenting as you with even more personalized advertising at other robin, i'm flying on from it in. so can companies like facebook, google and instagram? analyze our data according to target groups and sell the information to tourism marketing agencies like saint elmo's, the company devices, advertising strategies for entire holiday regions. olaf nits creates targeted campaigns from big data quincy, basically you can buy users to market to boil. you was, i could get a batch of
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a 1000 users say for $0.10 each to show them banners. yank awfully. the price rises depending on the target group because there are also other billing models where you pay per click on. i might also pay $0.10 for that, but thought, depending on who you want to address, incentive or the valley the click generates. were you not? you? my paid 2 or 3 euros we can visit is a click that ok, him, him to called, or dan kennedy at the algorithm is even running while we google calculating what we're interested in and selling at taylor made advert on the page we're about to look at to the highest bidder. toyota closely user is to transaction the more expensive it gets optional. if i know, for instance, that a user is looking for a 4 star hotel in or not, a click is more expensive because the likelihood of the user completing the booking based on the advert is higher. the sub is that on the price he or she is prepared to pay is also higher. it's higher internet
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gillian soon, a lot of money even before a holiday begins. but what about while we're on holiday? when we're looking for a restaurant with a good rating, this problem i didn't have that problem with these evaluation systems is that we can no longer trust dia because either rivals go in regular competitors worse than they young, or they buy positive rating stuff or they get friends and acquaintances is a give good ratings go to provide, but i'm no account to these evaluations conclusive am it was in the bahamas, osh, like im and how protected is the data gathered on us in a city like venice? when i know that it's probably claimed that the data obtained in a pseudonym is our anonymized phone back of your mean, they're not gonna one only,
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not the data are anonymous. they will de la. we know which country someone's telephone number comes from, but we don't know the name of the person. yeah. that would contravene data protection laws. ethical privacy does problems have of the problem is that in conjunction with other data that could be available if it is possible from a large pseudonym eyes or anonymized dataset to d, anonymize certain items of information and center happen procter, to and arm underneath urine. we often help make ourselves more transparent, especially while on vacation. for example, by taking a photo and revealing its location. that's probably much standardized. it's a problem with location data and is that when a company or the state knows where i was in the past, and also where all other people with statistical conclusions can be drawn me as to where i might be to morrow. i've started, even though i might not even have thought of wanting that up with a computer,
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i can already pre calculate that at it with a high level of probability and then make me corresponding offers. obligation on me . then heidi path and anger border. mom, the only alternative is to leave our cell phones at home. but most of us prefer to pay for the convenience with our data world wide. dubrovnik also installed surveillance cameras during lockdown in its old town. now, current tourist numbers show up on this website. ah, hazardous mo, from in we've changed our tourism management completely tourism used to swamp us the world. now we manage it. i said, i, i said today's mom portillo brought up to 15000 people would sometimes thrown into the old town before the pandemic. not only did this cause over crowding, it was also dangerous, because in the event of
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a mass panic, the mediaeval said he wool has just for exits. and cruise ship tourists who brought in little revenue all used to arrive at the same time and stay for just a few hours. so the man introduced new rules. but all probably lot a. so 1st rule to thought no more than 2 crew ships in port. and once the crews that in this movie, the money or the 2nd rule, each ship must stay birth for at least 8 hours their knees. the 3rd rule applies to day tourists, most of whom arrived by coach without each coach. and we're talking about $150.00 a day now has to register on a website and is given a special slot for them. and coaches are limited to 7 every half hour yet. it's like, well, oh boy, sad that wonderful kid, a maximum ala sidenote or was this allows dubrovnik to stagger arrivals. and the crush at the city gates,
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ah, tourism here is only slowly picking up again. life in the old town is still more relaxed, andy dick than it has been for a long time. ah, cynthia lucky left him a wasted as much money like we really have been able to reduce the number of simultaneous visits to the historic center. the addition of it, mr. goldman. sig, we're not gonna go on a ship on. we now know all about the number of people arriving at the city gate at wardrobe, boys. i escalate. this will be, but as i've always sal and it's not about numbers that it's about flow, yes, i wish i would that equal? ah, it's not about the number. it's about flow. steering streams of visitors while meeting tourists needs. like many hotspots, dubrovnik faces a logistical challenge every day and its inhabitants must cope with the
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consequences of tourism. the old town now has less than a 1000 residence. 20 years ago. it had 5 times as many how can the remaining residence benefit from their own town? sociologist, petra mac jenko is conducting research in one of we have to know exactly what we learned from this 10th. do we want it to become an urban center again? oh, should it remain a kind of open an museum? because the moment a person is living space is treated as a resource, is you conflicts of ice decoder seminar neither to door to door as hung? so is it legitimate for a city to profit at the expense of its residence? to broaden it gained in popularity by serving as a backdrop for star wars and game of thrones. but canada scape these fantasies, nuggets, there are many obstacles to revitalizing a historical. the 1st is,
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but there are no apartments available die, so there is no way for the people to come back to them. and it's really hard for young people in particular to find property because prices have now sought beyond all buying power. i. yes, janice, others, i see that there are any who have blood, there's been watching with visitors absent during the pandemic. many young people also lost their jobs. yet another reason to move. only older residence is still holding out. now the city is bracing for more tourists, but are they really welcome? bot net booster. yeah, every tourist is welcome. here i'll you know, law we want every visitor who comes to dubrovnik to respect our town. forced to we missed awkward ocean. luckily, respect the city to boss alone as residents would also like to say, visitors, respect their city,
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tourist stance like these have long sparked outrage. now such escapades or to become a thing of the past and the monthly stage. perform the man. it makes me sad to see torres coming here and doing things they would never do at home. see what i what it really depresses me. a man, i would like to see people show a greater sense of responsibility on absolute them into dumb when someone travel somewhere they should behave as if they were visiting their parents and not misbehave. avalon, or somebody whether residents and tourists will get on together in europe's hotspots also depends on future urban planning. barcelona is working on a new mobility concept. the aim is to ban more and more cars from the city center. barcelona already has 250 kilometers of bike lanes, shared bicycles and e bikes are available on every street corner, the 1st 30 minutes of free,
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but they're only available to locals. green hubs and squares transforming once busy intersections into what's known as super blocks. 5 of these oases have been set up already and 10 times as many a plant the aim is for them to replace 60 percent of the road still used by motorists and create space for social interaction. ah, even in tourist districts like elburn citizens, initiatives are creating small gardens which promote a sense of community and neighbourhood. barcelona is carving out a new form of urbanity and focusing on its strengths that i am. com or something that they own. a normal, truly nurse luna. has
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a lot to offer that anthony, and we've got great people. i'm outstanding museums and excellent artists. alice analysis, are they just if visitors are to come here all year round and not just in summer, we have to focus on culture because we want people to take an interest in culture and come into contact with us local isn't any the muslim unless you know that many european hotspots want to draw visitors attention to nearby attractions to in barcelona. that's monserrat abbey, amsterdam, pipes the beach at sanford, just 35 kilometers away. it's even been renamed amsterdam beach for now. and even copenhagen is placing its faith in decentralization. but barcelona is also pursuing another strategy, integrating visitors into every day life, so that at best they are indistinguishable from the locals.
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while working on a study at the future institute in vienna, sociologist christiana varga, identified one need. every visitor has resonance. tourism is the future. in f, a secret dotted in physics in resonance simply means being in harmony with something or reverberating with it is often applied to tourism. this means a shift from the mass phenomenon of taking off a list of sites to a major need for the resonance. in other words, and for localization in a specific area, the tourist is being perceived under dressed differently. the aim is to link people with on another again to stop a distinction being made between tourist and local. ideally, it's an encounter at a location between people who enjoy being together on a tight nathan and 50 years ago. holidays played
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a different role. people wanted rest and relaxation, preferably to do nothing to be fit for work again afterwards. traveling was separate from everyday life. that has the sheets for and that has now changed her. we're now in a mobility phase. in an age when being on the move is becoming more and more the norm, especially where the younger generation is concerned, and the boundaries between holidays and work between leisure, time and work, are now fading more and more my vinegar from atlanta for tenants. and the 2 tourists no longer want to be recognized as such, they want to be part of this community. again, my as a result, new products and constellations are being developed with regard to pleasure than at the combination of business and leisure. suddenly the visitor is no longer and mere today some way before traveling on. nowadays, he or she spends more time in one place 1st, the beach,
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then the laptop. the blizzard tourist combines work and pleasure. like here in better house. back in 2013. jodie. so beer us opened one of the 1st co working offices in barcelona desks and conference rooms can be rented on an hourly or a daily basis. it's a trend french hotel chain, a core, and a property investor. now hope to profit from on a large scale. they've opened flexible work rooms, not only in the popular suburb of popular now they want to become market leader and ain't soon to offer $1200.00 of these offices all over europe. yogurt. ok? gallon us air. they're all working. i think the whole working locations planned by hotel chain was the gas, as in the case of the woodrow wilson and probably being open because hotels are
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seeking a strategy for acquiring and binding new customers. they buy their cap that ah, the amos for their guess not just to stay overnight once or twice at apple, but to stay longer than me. and i got a lot of their little but apple had gone, but i really got a little st. roscoe murphy, alice, it's also an attempt to counter ebby and b, a platform which for years has been luring customers away from hotels on a grand scale. this chart shows ebay in bays in barcelona since the company was founded in 2008 each don't represent a host. it's no different in amsterdam or new york or berlin. ebay and bay has revolutionized the global tourist industry . the company went public and celebrated its billions customer in 2021. despite new
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laws, ebby and b is still partly responsible for the housing shortage in major cities. yet it's basic concept meets many tourists need for genuine contact at a time in which travel is increasingly hectic. it's gone. it will become more a case of as well as rather than either or depending on my needs or the phase of life. i mean, i might want to get from atp fast, but i might make a conscious decision to travel slowly. be slow, travel like slow food and slow fashion as a counterpoint to being rushed plus space. and in is also the new luxury. and exclusivity is reflected in price because space costs money on that. and so attractive space we feel people also means higher
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prices either a, it's not only more space that holidaymakers want many. now also want to travel sustainably. 25 years ago. this gave chi pardon an idea and he founded the eisen mit zanan, or traveling with purpose. his team tests every trip, but what is sustainable travel? you fluke all flights of carbon dioxide compensated 100 percent, but also by people avoiding plastic as much as possible at their location or getting around by bike or on foot and not integrating any short whole flights into their holiday. his agency offers encounters on equal terms on trips to vietnam, tourists cycle from place to place like the locals, or get to know the hill communities on foot. then the amazons and guests when we
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are else and above with our guests, we try to establish actual contacts. so that true communication takes place in call . it's important for us for as much added value as possible to remain in the country. and in our case, the figure is on average, 51 percent, but the figure for an all inclusive hotel, for example, is only a fraction of the isaac. and the higher the added value, the more sustainable a product is from ohio to gar, this product. yet during the pandemic, it wasn't sustainable companies that received government support. it was the industry's giants like to eat, the world's biggest travel company, and lufthansa with no environmental conditions attached the nuclear try. the money could have been diverse in the right direction in can spend solely on things that are really good for society. were conditions could have been attached to the money that is flowing into the airline rush to make them commit long term to reducing their greenhouse gas emissions of good awesome the airlines fleeced from it's is in lancaster. she does. we're finished near her pipers cousins once. once you ah,
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but lufthansa offers exactly the opposite, rewarding its customers with a bonus program, even for short, whole flights, and also for many take offs and landings. air france also received government support, but it had to commit to reducing its c o 2 emissions by 50 percent by 2024. and in the case of domestic flights, by offering rail travel as an alternative wherever possible. the tiny island state of palau also wants tourists to act more consciously. law a film shown to every visitor immediately upon arrival under lines. why in the high season these diving paradise in the pacific ocean has 5 times more visitors than local inhabitants.
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tourists as shown. how much damage their behavior can cause to the sensitive coral reefs. but at the same time, pounds, economy needs visitors. on arrival, a pledge is stamped into every holiday makers, passport, signing. it is a written commitment to respect nature in palau. this might only be a symbolic act, but it is a step towards making people aware of the ecological damage tourism is causing world wide. ah, the citizens of venice know all about the damage caused by cruise ships. they even feel it personally. ah. we might allow an o before trove it the 10 ships arrived every day for b. b. as a result, by february we had already exceeded clearly air pollution limits set by the
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european union. i forget, i use that. i'm able to clean the sale of yankee if you hang out laundry and the ship arrives. so you've quickly got to bring it in again because of the dirt that's in the air now because okay, yes. in the suburb where i live, you can hardly breathe when a ship comes in that narvie upon it. isn't that enough? i in a spit out but it looks as if cruise tourism here is going to pick up precisely where it left off before the pandemic. no giant cruise ships in venice. the years activists on and along the g, a decker can now have repeatedly demonstrated against the giant cruise line, as most of the ships burn, heavy fuel oil, which releases 100 times more pollutants into the air than the ordinary diesel. fuel used by trucks,
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but the number of bookings is soaring once again. over the next few years, the industry expects the number of crews ship passengers to rise from 30 to 40000000 a year. 40 new cruise line is that to be added to the world's fleets by 2027. for the 1st time, advocates of cruise tourism are also protesting. many lost their jobs during the pandemic and a gland to see the things of finally picking up again. great opportunities to go into these mo warner, a cruise tourism is good tourism. good thing, little especially of venice is the home port. i said it because it means that ships stay longer. i'm gonna leave it guarantees and come for the city. it was for hotels
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shuttle, the taxi drivers land through flights to venice again in many ways i had a little door waste. a few weeks after the protest, the activists choked up a minor success. now only cruise ships weighing less than $25000.00 tons can sail past st. marks. square giant ships like this. now have to more at the industrial port, though they can still cause damage to the venetian lagoon. nevertheless, travel remains one of the world's most lucrative industries. in 2019 inbound tourism brought in about $1.00 trillion dollars in revenue. what must change if cities and regions are to promote sustainable tourism or nasa, dea aqaba and had a large international companies that avoid democratic controls and to promote harmful mass tourism police ought to be ban tech came back that i'll that he
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thought it is global system has to change, i mean like an angel, but of politicians must set the framework and create incentives for sustainable and climate neutral travel. when, if we want to fly from the industry needs to develop new technology so that we can keep flying through that c o 2 neutral him feel twine or tar. ah, ah. and what can we do? instead of getting off to exotic locations, we can explore regions closer to home and linger a while rather than just taking off items on our bucket lists. we can travel less often, but for longer we could carefully way up every trip and make more conscious decisions about how we travel. perhaps avoiding environmentally damaging trips until innovative solutions emerge. or we could ox to discover everything possible
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irrespective of the cost. how we want to travel in the future depends on how we want to live in the future. ah, ah, ah, ah ah, ah, ah ah, a pulse with the beginning of a story that moves us and takes us along for the ride. it's about to perspective culture
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information. this is dw and d, w made for mines o 175 years ago. young start up entrepreneur at a specific goal to build the best optical instruments in the cod size lind devices bearing his name with one d. b feature in the landing and lead science into realms. 175 years of starts june 19th, w ah
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ah ah, ah, this is really news life from berlin, the battle for ukraine's don bass region regis on marshall forces now control up to 80 percent of the key city severity nets. president soleski says the human cost of the battle is terrifying and it's pleading for more where.

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