Hong Kong grapples with ecotourism surge at remote beaches

A sea of 500 tents covered Ham Tin Wan beach in Sai Kung during the Labour Day holiday, as mainland tour groups turned the site into a crowded campsite.

Campers from mainland China joined organised tours for the Golden Week break. They slept in rows of tents and cooked hotpot meals on the sand.

By the next morning the sole public bathroom sink was clogged with food scraps. Some tents remained for the next arrivals.

One guide who gave his surname as Shu said he was working on a tourist visa. Each of his four clients paid 888 yuan for the two-day trip.

Authorities now face the task of managing visitor numbers while protecting the landscapes they promote for ecotourism.

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Thousands visited Hong Kong’s East Dam at High Island Reservoir in Sai Kung during the start of the Labour Day 'Golden Week' holiday, continuing the surge seen over Easter. A lawmaker has suggested an entry fee to help maintain the UNESCO Global Geopark amid rising ecotourism popularity.

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Hong Kong’s East Dam welcomed about 1,400 visitors daily over the first four days of the Easter break despite adverse weather, conservation authorities said. The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department recorded 18 enforcement actions for littering and illegal camping at Sai Kung East Country Park. Authorities vowed to explore long-term management strategies for popular sites.

On December 18, Hainan became a separate customs territory from mainland China, exempting around 6,600 categories of goods from tariffs—about 74 per cent of taxable imports—to support sustainable growth as a free-trade port. The island province, home to more than 10 million people and slightly larger than Belgium, aims to move beyond its tourism-centred economy following three speculative booms and busts.

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A bird watcher spotted five people landing on an uninhabited island near Po Toi Island, a tern breeding site in southern Hong Kong waters, during mainland China’s Labour Day holiday. Green Hope Hong Kong warned that such disturbances could cause the birds to abandon their nests. The sighting occurred on the second day of the holiday.

 

 

 

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