Stakeholder Perspectives Towards National Parks and Protected Areas in Saudi Arabia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“The purpose of the National Biodiversity Strategy is to promote the conservation of biodiversity and its sustainable use by placing biodiversity at the center of national planning, development and extending the scope of the Strategy to include the protection, restoration, sustainable use, equitable sharing, and systematic monitoring.”
2. Literature Review
2.1. Theoretical Framework
2.2. Protected Area Management
2.3. Conservation Status in Saudi Arabia
3. Methods
4. Results
4.1. Tourism Development
4.1.1. Knowledge of Tourism
Tourism influences our attitudes and behavior. Tourists can benefit by getting more information and learning about recreation and the environment. At the same time, ecotourism supports protecting wildlife, natural environments, and achieving an environmental balance.
4.1.2. Potential for Ecotourism
National parks are sites to maintain wildlife and the environment. They are also places for investment, entertainment, education, awareness, protection of wildlife and heritage sites, and places where handicrafts can be presented and sold.
4.1.3. Cultural Heritage
Tourism is an economic activity that is based mainly on investing in a set of natural or cultural resources to receive revenues and financial returns, and ultimately supports the economy and enhances the gross national product.
4.2. Management Issues
4.2.1. Current Management
In the current situation, there is noticeable destruction of natural resources and the environment. There is hunting and overfishing, even in the reserves, which breaks laws that protect biological diversity. The reserves play only a very weak role to protect the environment. Protected areas suffer from destruction that comes from illegal activities and other serious infringements.
4.2.2. Involvement of Local Communities and NGOs
Because these designs are difficult for the ministry to create on its own, it collaborates with the private sector. It is mentioned in the contract [between the ministry and the consultant] that questionnaires must be created and people’s opinions must be collected…But, getting people’s opinions is not enough—you must organize a workshop for each park and invite locals and prospective visitors... This means that a significant portion of design input falls to the judgment of individual private consultants.
4.2.3. Staff Competence
The employees working in our natural reserves have weak qualifications. Some have high school certificates, and others have intermediate certificates.
4.3. Development Challenges
4.3.1. Conservation and Environmental Awareness
Perhaps the most important obstacle is the low environmental awareness in general. The reason for this, as I mentioned earlier, is the novelty of ecotourism or recreation and the recent establishment of NPs and PAs. Also, there is a lack of information about biodiversity and its importance in the Kingdom, as it is not studied in schools at all levels.
4.3.2. Privatization
Tourism depends mainly on expenditures from tourists who represent the demand side of tourism services, while the supply side is represented by the expenditures of the investors. The tourism industry is made up of the private sector, and it is the investors, whether individuals or groups who construct and staff hotels, resorts, and theme parks. In addition, the private sector contributes to the industry by constructing buildings for the public sector.
4.4. Policy Concerns
4.4.1. Land Development and Ownership
Everyone is working alone, but if the community works together and cooperates, it would bring benefits to all. There is one main direction and the most important thing is to have environmental programs or environmental protection, whether by limiting pollution or limiting destruction... We must preserve natural resources for the upcoming generations.
We are not a legislative entity, we are a regulatory agency; thus, we do not have the resources such as lands to implement tourism projects. The only thing we can do is collaborate with the Wildlife Authority.
4.4.2. Conflicting Roles
There are systems and laws but there is no executive authority to apply and enforce to limit infringements such as hunting.
4.4.3. Tourism Development Cooperation
We need to issue policies for the environment and environmental tourism and create a balance between tourist activities and the environment. The government should create policies, laws, and legislation, and there should be cooperation and coordination among authorities and universities, since the entire system of touristic and environmental activities should be efficiently interconnected in order to achieve sustainable development.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
- Reevaluate and reform the current system of leasing contracts, to mitigate the loss of private sector investments in Saudi Arabia.
- Form public-private partnerships to invest in wildlife conservation and ecotourism projects.
- Establish government-led initiatives to privatize lands to incentivize the private sector.
- Integrate NGOs into the management systems of parks and reserves and assign them with official roles and tasks.
- Raise awareness of tourism and environmental preservation for each group of stakeholders.
- Build cooperation with academic institutions and universities to develop guidelines for visitor management and design of visitor experiences.
- Establish educational incentive programs with official certification programs for rangers in national parks and protected areas.
Limitations and Future Research
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Royal Reserves | Included SWA Protected Areas | Size of Area (km2) |
---|---|---|
1 - Imam Abdulaziz bin Mohammad | – | 11,300 |
2 - Imam Saud bin Abdulaziz | Mahazat as - Sayd | 2553 |
3 - Imam Turki bin Abdullah | At - Taysiyah | 91,500 |
4 - King Abdulaziz | – | 15,700 |
5 - King Salman bin Abdulaziz | Harrat al Harrah Al - Khunfah Al - Tubayq | 130,700 |
6 - Prince Mohammad bin Salman | – | 16,000 |
Organization/Institution | Type |
---|---|
Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage | Public |
Directorate of Land and Survey (MEWA) | Public |
Directorate of Environment (MEWA) | Public |
Saudi Wildlife Authority | Public |
Saudi Tourism Society | Public/Private |
National Parks/ Protected Areas Managers | |
Department of Forestry (MEWA) | Public |
Thumamah National Park | Private |
Environmental and Tourism Consultants | |
Saudi Geographical Society | Local NGO |
Water Experts Bureau | Private |
Environmental and Tourism Advocacy Organizations | |
EcoLife | Local NGO |
Environmental Green Horizons Society | Local NGO |
|
Major themes | Sub-themes |
---|---|
Tourism development |
|
Management issues |
|
Development challenges |
|
Policy concerns |
|
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Al-Tokhais, A.; Thapa, B. Stakeholder Perspectives Towards National Parks and Protected Areas in Saudi Arabia. Sustainability 2019, 11, 2323. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082323
Al-Tokhais A, Thapa B. Stakeholder Perspectives Towards National Parks and Protected Areas in Saudi Arabia. Sustainability. 2019; 11(8):2323. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082323
Chicago/Turabian StyleAl-Tokhais, Abdulelah, and Brijesh Thapa. 2019. "Stakeholder Perspectives Towards National Parks and Protected Areas in Saudi Arabia" Sustainability 11, no. 8: 2323. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082323
APA StyleAl-Tokhais, A., & Thapa, B. (2019). Stakeholder Perspectives Towards National Parks and Protected Areas in Saudi Arabia. Sustainability, 11(8), 2323. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082323