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filler@godaddy.com
Commonly, and often unknowingly, the benefits of tourism are heavily weighted in favour of the tourist and the negative effects of travel remain with the planet and the people we meet along the way. Sadly tourism can be rife with exploitation, pollution, waste, land deterioration, community displacement, unfair work standards and more. Its hard hitting to think that the trips we take to sooth curiosities, to achieve dreams, to escape from the day to day can have such a negative impact on local livelihoods. We know that as travellers you want to make responsible choices but it can be hard to find reliable and trusted information when the tourism sector is flooded with unclear and confusing accreditations, certifications, stamps, badges, awards and more. That is one of the problems we aim to counteract, we want to rebalance the benefits of tourism by championing positive impact tourism and set new standards to make it a mutually beneficial industry.
We have taken a transparent approach on how we select the providers we work with so you can be confident that whilst you are making memories, your travel experiences are contributing to positive change that promotes environmental stewardship and social responsibility.
Positive Impact looks at sustainability in a more holistic way. It steps beyond carbon measurement and looks at factors like access to resource, local challenges, fair working practices and improves local livelihood through local sourcing. It is an all encompassing approach that must support an inclusive effort to better the world. As the challenges and available resources differ country to country, it's not realistic to take a globalised blanket approach to a set of rules. Our framework maintains flexibility, is designed to continually evolve and is adaptable to be market appropriate for the places they intend to serve.
The business is locally owned and managed where the owners live in the geographic area to where the business is located and employs local people to promote a circulate economy.
Regenerative companies are those acting as guardians of the assets they operate in and have taken careful consideration to omit the negative effects of tourism and actively contribute to the bettering the places we explore and communities they work in.
They must uphold ethical conduct to prioritise the safety and welfare of people. This includes collaborating with local communities to ensure tourism brings benefits and prohibits displacement or disruption to livelihood for tourism activities.
They must demonstrate proactive conduct to preserve the environment including being mindful of their impact, avoiding single-use products, prioritising renewable energy where possible, and minimising consumption of materials, energy, and water.
They are required act with ethical and responsible conduct to safeguard wildlife by strictly following local wildlife regulations, avoid experiences with captive animals, refrain from disturbing natural habitats, and steer clear of businesses involved in the commercial trade of endangered species.
They the use the opportunity to educate travellers about local and global challenges in tourism, talk about their own efforts to address challenges and share what the positive contributions result from a Delve booking.
They ensure travellers are aware of behavioural expectations when interacting with people, wildlife, or sacred locations. They obtain consent for sharing stories from those whom they belong to, and are culturally and historically accurate without embellishing or misrepresentation.
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