Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - To develop tourism, no environment should be sacrificed and no excessive commercial development should be carried out.

To develop tourism, no environment should be sacrificed and no excessive commercial development should be carried out.

To develop tourism, we cannot sacrifice the ecological environment or engage in excessive commercial development.

1. The ecological environment cannot be sacrificed

Protecting the ecology is the foundation for the development of eco-tourism. Ecological environmental protection is a cause that benefits the present and will benefit the future. Our country attaches great importance to ecological and environmental protection. However, at present, some scenic spots do not grasp the balance between tourism development and ecological protection. In the name of developing tourism resources, they deplete the lake for fishing, seriously damaging the local ecology. The development of tourism cannot be at the expense of the ecological environment and must be correctly guided and managed.

2. Do not engage in excessive commercial development

To develop tourism, you can engage in commercial development, but it must be a scientific business model. Once it is excessive, it will cause damage to the ecology, and the gain will not be worth the loss. matter. Many places only consider commercial needs, build roads, parking lots, and even develop real estate projects in nature reserves and scenic spots, reducing vegetation coverage and destroying natural beauty. These improper commercial development practices have caused irreversible damage to scenic spots.

The current problems in the ecological environment are listed as follows:

1. Land degradation

Land degradation and desertification refer to the excessive grazing, farming, and indiscriminate cultivation of land by people. The synergistic effect of human factors such as deforestation and a series of natural factors has led to a decline in land quality and gradual desertification. 15% of the global land area has been degraded to varying degrees due to human activities.

2. Reduction in forest area

Forests are known as the "lungs of the earth" and "nature's master dispatch room" and have a significant regulating function for the environment. Due to extensive imports in developed countries and land reclamation, logging, and grazing in developing countries, the forest area has been significantly reduced. Greenpeace estimates that 80% of the world's original forests have been destroyed in the past 100 years.

Reference for the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Ecological Environment