Beauty of Bali under threat from pressures of mass tourism

Boom in visitors to island paradise places strain on natural resources and the local Hindu culture

For years Bali, the pearl among the Sunda Islands, has been touted as an earthly paradise, thanks to the its tropical landscapes, its white sandy beaches, the tormented beauty of its Hindu temples and its inhabitants' reputation for kindness and tolerance.

But this idyllic spot may soon be a thing of the past, with the threat of Bali – population 3.5 million – changing beyond recognition, a prey to the accumulated effects of mass tourism, unbridled consumption of resources and environmental collapse.

"From the 1970s onwards Bali really became a tourist destination," says Wayan Suardana, head of Walhisimilan, a conservation group campaigning for the environment. "But to begin with it was mainly cultural tourism. Now we are seeing mass tourism. And that's a problem."

Hundreds of hotels use up a large share of freshwater reserves, with each four-star room consuming 300 litres a day. "By 2015 Bali could be facing a drinking water crisis," Suardana says.

More than a million visitors came to Bali in 2001. The figures for 2011 suggest that numbers have more than doubled since, ultimately unaffected by the 2002 terror attack, which left 202 dead, including many Australians. Every year 700 hectares of land is lost to hotels, luxury housing for rich foreigners or just roads to improve connections on the island. Every day some 13,000 cubic metres of waste is dumped on public tips and only half is recycled. With 13% more cars on the roads every year, the steadily increasing traffic causes massive jams.

In an attempt to mitigate the ill effects of mass tourism on the local Hindu culture – an exception in largely Muslim Indonesia – the authorities have introduced environmental legislation. One of its provisions makes it compulsory for resorts to be set back at least 150 metres from beaches, with no hotels within 5km of Hindu temples.

So far this initiative has made no difference. Efforts to decentralise government in Indonesia – a patchwork of 17,000 islands with a population of 240 million – have given a disproportionate share of power to the bupati (elected high sheriffs), who run areas roughly equivalent to a British county. The bupati are not in favour of the new law. "The law on environmental protection has been passed but the bupati, who have financial interests and are hand-in-glove with property developers, have done all they can to prevent the law from being enforced," alleges the deputy leader of Bali's regional assembly, Ketut Adnyana.

"Local leaders have no long-term perspective," he adds. "They want a quick return on investments and tourism allows that. The irony is that one day, when development has reached a certain level, visitors will no longer find what they seek here."

In January 2011, the governor of Bali, Made Mangku Pastika, issued a ban on new buildings in heavily developed areas, warning that Bali was in danger of becoming a sterile land bristling with concrete. The ban is far from popular with investors.

"Tourism is partly due to the attraction of our culture: if mass tourism develops in a way that threatens our culture, we will lose our specific attraction," says Ida Bagus Ngurah Wijaya, head of the Bali tourist board and the owner of a hotel at Sanur, a prime destination.

"We have used culture as merchandise," says poet and theatre director Ketut Yuliarsa, a native of Ubud. He is horrified by the turn of events. "The Balinese are deeply attached to their religion and culture: they spend a lot of time in the temples and respect the ritual. But mass tourism has upset such practices: the diversity of local cultures and the specific character of certain rites are being harmonised. Foreigners are offered a standardised package," the poet explains.

It is all the more difficult to halt such trends, because the travel trade does have a positive side. "People are better off, living standards have improved. Many Balinese are unaware of the changes going on," Yuliarsa says.

"Four-fifths of Balinese society is deeply committed to daily worship," says Audrey Lamou, who headed the Alliance Française on the island for several years. "But some youths, who must pay a form of monetary compensation to their village when they cannot attend ritual gatherings, are fed up with such strict rules."

At the same time, "the Balinese are increasingly obsessed with easy money," Lamou says. "Institutions such as gamelans [musical ensembles] are dying out and the Balinese language is gradually losing ground to the official language of Indonesia. With such massive changes it sometimes looks as if, in cultural terms, the population is heading for disaster."

Compared with other holiday venues in south-east Asia, Bali has retained much of its magic, at least in the areas so far spared by mass tourism. But if nothing is done to halt current trends, it may suffer the same fate as other dream destinations.

This article originally appeared in Le Monde

Contributor

Bruno Philip

The GuardianTramp

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