Showing posts with label National Administration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Administration. Show all posts

Monday, January 3, 2011

Authorities fail to control resort boom: official

Authorities fail to control resort boom: officialBeaches in Vietnam have been destroyed by the construction of too many resorts and villas, according to an industry official who called the growth a failure of management.

Many beaches along the country have been “torn apart” and the problem is a headache for tourism authorities, said Nguyen Van Tuan, head of Vietnam's National Administration of Toursim.

Poor plannning of the projects has lead to an inappropriate use of public properties, Tuan said in an interview with Tuoi Tre newspaper on Friday.

As local governments are given the autonomy to license new resorts built on less than two hectares of land, many investors have tried to adjust the size of their projects so that they can be approved easily without seeking consent from the state government, he said.

Beautiful beaches have become overcrowded with resorts and there is not enough space for both the locals and tourists.

“Another consequence is that there can be hundreds of resorts on a long beach, but all of them are small and fail to meet international standards for luxury resorts,” he said. “It’s a huge waste of natural resources.”

The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism will review the construction of seaside projects, Tuan said. “Our viewpoint is that we have to address the weaknesses (in planning) to solve the problem.”

Than Thanh Vu, General Secretary of Vietnam's Tourism Property Association, said his association offered to act as an advisory body in the matter.

The development of resorts has, in fact, benefited the economy of several coastal provinces, including Binh Thuan, Quang Nam and Ba Ria-Vung Tau, Vu said.

However, he argued, the most important thing is to protect the interests of both investors and the community.

Related Articles

Authorities fail to control resort boom: official

Authorities fail to control resort boom: officialBeaches in Vietnam have been destroyed by the construction of too many resorts and villas, according to an industry official who called the growth a failure of management.

Many beaches along the country have been “torn apart” and the problem is a headache for tourism authorities, said Nguyen Van Tuan, head of Vietnam's National Administration of Toursim.

Poor plannning of the projects has lead to an inappropriate use of public properties, Tuan said in an interview with Tuoi Tre newspaper on Friday.

As local governments are given the autonomy to license new resorts built on less than two hectares of land, many investors have tried to adjust the size of their projects so that they can be approved easily without seeking consent from the state government, he said.

Beautiful beaches have become overcrowded with resorts and there is not enough space for both the locals and tourists.

“Another consequence is that there can be hundreds of resorts on a long beach, but all of them are small and fail to meet international standards for luxury resorts,” he said. “It’s a huge waste of natural resources.”

The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism will review the construction of seaside projects, Tuan said. “Our viewpoint is that we have to address the weaknesses (in planning) to solve the problem.”

Than Thanh Vu, General Secretary of Vietnam's Tourism Property Association, said his association offered to act as an advisory body in the matter.

The development of resorts has, in fact, benefited the economy of several coastal provinces, including Binh Thuan, Quang Nam and Ba Ria-Vung Tau, Vu said.

However, he argued, the most important thing is to protect the interests of both investors and the community.

Related Articles

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Tourist arrivals expected to top 5 million this year

Tourists visit HCM City. The Viet Nam National Administration of Tourism expects the country will welcome about 5 million visitors this year, which is almost 1 million higher than the initial annual target. —VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Vu

Tourists visit HCM City. The Viet Nam National Administration of Tourism expects the country will welcome about 5 million visitors this year, which is almost 1 million higher than the initial annual target. —VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Vu

HCM CITY — The strong recovery of the inbound sector in recent months made the Viet Nam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) confident it can surpass its annual target and receive 5 million foreign visitors this year.

The original target was 4.2 million international visitors, a year – on-year increase of 10 per cent, said VNAT director Nguyen Van Tuan.

"The sector will surely hit the 4.2 million target two months early," Tuan said.

"The tourism industry is highly sensitive to economic and financial changes," he said, noting that the global economic downturn last year had caused a significant decrease in the number of foreign visitors to Viet Nam.

And this year, along with the economic recovery, foreign arrivals had also increased strongly, he said.

Strengthening large scale promotions in key markets like France, the US, China, South Korea, Japan and ASEAN countries have also proved effective with the number of visitors from these markets increasing sharply.

Moreover, the unstable political situation in Thailand earlier this year made many visitors from Western Europe and North America shift their holiday destination to other countries including Viet Nam.

Tuan said that the tourism sector will continue to promote the country's image abroad with travel promotion programmes in potential markets like China, Northeast Asia, ASEAN and Western Europe.

The country welcomed over 3.8 million international visitors last year, down 11.5 per cent from the previous year. International arrivals in the first eight months of this year reached 3.3 million, up 35.2 per cent over the same period last year.

Viet Nam's tourism turnover in the first eight months of this year was VND64 trillion (US$3.28 billion), a year-on-year increase of 37.13 per cent, meeting 80 per cent of the annual plan, according to the VNAT. — VNS

Related Articles