dc.description.abstract | Tourism is a leading economic activity in Kenya, being the third largest foreign
exchange earner after tea and horticulture. Since the 1990s, particularly the
second half of the decade, Kenya’s tourism industry has faced enormous
challenges, including declines in per capita spending, average length of stay,
hotel occupancy rates, hotel room rates and service quality. Environmental
degradation and deterioration in the quality of tourism products due to mass
tourism are some of the factors that have contributed to this decline. Despite
the country’s policy advocating spatial distribution of tourists in the country,
tourism marketing has continued to focus on the traditional attractions, thereby
perpetuating concentration.
This paper looks at how tourism has affected the environment in Kenya and
what is being done about it. Using existing literature and results of discussions
with 17 industry players, the study found evidence, though most of it
qualitative, of environmental impacts. The impacts are most severe in crowded
and overdeveloped tourist attractions. At the coast, which accounts for close to
60% of the country’s total bed-nights, beaches have been seriously degraded
and polluted, coral reefs and mangrove forests substantially destroyed and
marine species adversely affected. Too many hotels and other tourist facilities
have been developed without regard to carrying capacity limits. In game parks,
which are the prime motivation for 70–80% of all tourists visiting the country,
vegetation has been degraded, wildlife behaviour disrupted, pollution increased,
and resources have generally been overutilized... | en |