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Sonam Wangchuk Chief Guest's Speech Outlook RT Summit 2018
OutlookIndia
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2 years ago
Sonam Wangchuk: Chief Guest's Speech at the Indian Responsible Tourism Summit & Awards 2018.
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00:00
"If the valley is reached by high passes,
00:05
only the best of friends and worst of enemies are its visitors."
00:11
That's a proverb in Ladakh and Tibet.
00:15
I think our ancestors referred to invaders and explorers in this proverb,
00:26
but it holds as much true today with tourism.
00:31
And I come from one such valley that is approached by high passes, Ladakh,
00:39
and I've seen the growth of tourism from best of friends coming
00:45
to what seems more like worst of enemies today.
00:50
And I've been also struggling, working to see how it could again be changed
00:58
to best of friends.
01:00
In 1974, when the government of India opened Ladakh for tourism,
01:07
I was a little boy in a remote village with only five families.
01:14
And this family of mine was almost forced to open up our house
01:22
to become what would today be called a homestay,
01:27
because it was on the way between two very famous sites in Ladakh,
01:38
Alchi and Lamayuru.
01:41
So, visitors from mainly Europe in those days,
01:48
when Ladakh was actually accessed by high passes,
01:53
and only the really interested, well-studied, adventurous as it was
02:02
in those days to venture into Ladakh, would come.
02:07
And many of them would come begging my mother for a place to sleep,
02:15
and she would, out of Ladakhi hospitality, receive them, feed them.
02:21
And the next morning, I would often see almost a fight going on
02:28
about paying and not accepting money.
02:32
And I would often see that the guests would leave when she would refuse to take money,
02:38
that they have left their money under the pillows, under the plates, and so on.
02:45
That was another kind of tourism that I saw.
02:51
And as a little boy, I used to have a great time making lots of friends
02:58
from different countries and taking them around to the mountains,
03:04
to the monasteries, showing them the river and so on.
03:09
And I didn't go to a school till nine years of age,
03:16
because my little village with five households didn't have a school,
03:21
and that's not a bad thing.
03:24
I learned later it was the best time of my childhood.
03:28
And these tourists were visitors or explorers who became my friends,
03:34
and that's how I learned a lot of things, including English in a tiny village,
03:40
and later French and German and many other languages.
03:45
So as a little child, they were a great part of my growth,
03:51
learning about the world and the languages.
03:55
The problem in Ladakh is that we are completely dependent on glaciers for our water,
04:01
for our farming.
04:03
And with the warming up, these glaciers are smaller and smaller,
04:09
and in springtime, when all plants wake up asking for water,
04:14
there isn't enough water, partly because the glaciers are becoming smaller,
04:18
partly because where the glaciers are at heights,
04:22
it's still too cold for it to melt and reach the village where they need water.
04:28
So there is a great shortage of water in springtime,
04:33
conflicts around water.
04:35
But then in summer, there's actually excess of water,
04:38
even floods as the glaciers melt and melt fast,
04:42
and this flow continues into autumn and even winter with a lag.
04:49
Now, in winter, nobody farms,
04:51
so the water just flows into the Indus River and the Arabian Sea.
04:55
So we said, "How about freezing it in winter
05:00
and keeping it in a way that it lasts till the next summer?"
05:07
This, of course, was considered laughable by many
05:11
to do it at village altitudes, because it would melt prematurely.
05:16
All ice on ground is gone.
05:18
How can you keep ice till May and June?
05:22
And we wanted to do it at village altitudes
05:25
so that people could easily do it.
05:27
There were other experiments before us,
05:29
but they had to be built high up near the glaciers,
05:33
which was so high up that people wouldn't bother to maintain.
05:37
So we used high school science to make ice last.
05:44
To cut it short, I just say that in geometry,
05:48
we learn about shapes that have minimal surface area for the volume,
05:52
for example, spheres, hemispheres, cones.
05:56
So we at this school said,
05:59
"You can either cover the glacier ice with the shade
06:04
so it lasts longer into the spring,
06:07
but that wouldn't be practical,
06:09
because how much of covering can you afford
06:12
for a huge chunk of ice or a mountain of ice?"
06:16
So can we reduce the surface area and increase the volume?
06:21
Because the sun needs surface area, doesn't care about volume.
06:26
Farmers need volume, don't care about surface area.
06:30
So can we somehow make a cone of ice that goes vertically up
06:37
and a cone like a hemisphere has minimal surface area for the volume
06:42
so that sun cannot melt it,
06:44
because it doesn't get the surface area.
06:46
So we did a prototype four years ago
06:50
and betted on how long it will last.
06:54
The wildest was till April, but then it went till July.
06:58
The ice lasted till July and slowly melted to give its water to trees.
07:04
So the hypothesis, the magic of high school science worked to solve this problem.
07:09
When Ladakh was open to tourism,
07:12
it had only approach access by road,
07:16
and therefore it was so hard.
07:18
So only the very, very dedicated and committed ones would come.
07:23
But now we have like 13 or 14 flights a day in summer.
07:29
So suddenly those passes are gone and it's open for mass tourism.
07:34
And that is killing Leh, the city, which is where it is concentrated.
07:40
Unfortunately, this tourism rose from 2000 when it started, roughly,
07:46
to 20,000 for until around 2004 or so.
07:52
It used to be almost steady at 20,000.
07:56
Then in the next few years, till by 2010 or so,
08:00
it went to 200,000 suddenly.
08:04
And 200,000 concentrated on a 5-square-kilometer township of Leh.
08:11
So you can imagine 200,000 on a town of 5 square kilometers
08:16
with 20,000 people and in 5 summer months.
08:21
Such a concentrated dose that it's killing the city itself.
08:26
So what through this we are trying to do
08:29
is to make them best of friends again
08:32
from this concentrated dose of tourists,
08:36
which people in Leh have had enough of them.
08:39
They are not interested in any cultural exchange or about their lives or so on.
08:44
It's just a hotel to sleep and get done with that.
08:48
So what we are now trying to do is expand it outside Leh
08:53
and outside of the 5 summer months.
08:56
So if you expand it to all parts of Ladakh
09:01
and open many, many, many villages with their farmhouses,
09:06
with the mothers or amalas,
09:09
trained to receive visitors in very professional ways,
09:14
both get amazing experience.
09:17
Then the carrying capacity suddenly increases.
09:21
What is like the limit or beyond for a 5-square-kilometer township?
09:27
Suddenly when you expand it to the 45,000 square kilometers that Ladakh is
09:33
and 300,000 people,
09:36
I did a back of the envelope calculation
09:39
and it turns out that we can actually absorb 500,000 more
09:45
and still be very meaningful in different villages
09:49
where people are interested in each other.
09:52
They get to see authentic life in villages and so on.
09:56
So by expanding it outside of Leh into villages like Pyang and beyond,
10:02
it can once again become interesting for both sides.
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