WANDERLUST NEWS
Galápagos Islands entry fee doubles following ‘urgent need’ for sustainable tourism Galápagos Islands entry fee doubles following ‘urgent need’ for sustainable tourism
Approximately 1,000 km off Ecuador’s coastline lie the Galápagos Islands. This remote volcanic archipelago, consisting of 19 islands, has been sought-after by adventure-loving travellers ever since it arrived firmly on the tourist map in the 1970s.
It was of course visited much before then, with Charles Darwin famously exploring the islands in 1835: his observations of its unusual species inspiring his theory of evolution. Now, the Galápagos Islands are best known for their wondrous wildlife sightings, from the Galápagos tortoise to marine iguanas and blue-footed boobies. The island was named a Natural World Heritage Site in 1978 and expanded in 2007 to include its surrounding marine park.
But with the islands made more accessible in recent years, the impact of mass tourism on its rare ecosystem has been raised as a concern time and time again. Unmanageable visitors can lead to the worrying introduction of invasive species, as well as food shortages and difficulty managing waste.
For travellers visiting the Galápagos Islands, there has been an entry fee of $100 (£79) for foreign adult travellers for the past 26 years, but government officials have now announced this cost will be doubled to $200 (£148) by 1 August 2024. For children under 12, it will be $100, and residents of Ecuador will continue to pay a discounted rate, although this has been raised from $5 to $30.
Said to be ‘long overdue’, the revised one-off entry fee was decided due to an ‘urgent need for sustainable tourism practices’. The raised funds will be put towards ongoing conservation efforts, as well as updating infrastructure and community programmes aimed at ‘mitigating tourism’s ecological footprint on the islands’.
Neils Olsen, Ecuador’s Minister of Tourism said: “The Galápagos Islands are not only a national treasure but a global one. It is our collective responsibility to protect and preserve this unparalleled ecosystem for future generations.
“The adjustment in the entry fee, the first in 26 years, is a necessary measure to ensure that tourism in the Galápagos remains sustainable and mutually beneficial to both the environment and our local communities.”
Although some concerns have been raised in the local community about the increased fee putting off travellers from visiting, the rate is extremely low compared to other popular wildlife destinations, such as the Masai Mara Nature Reserve in Kenya, which costs visitors $285 per person per day during its high season.
And with more famously overcrowded destinations recently introducing entry fees, such as Venice and Bali, it appears to be one of the best initiatives to tackle overtourism right now.