The International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) and UNWTO have signed a special Joint Statement on Aviation
and Tourism, acknowledging the intention of the two UN agencies to
begin cooperating more closely on issues of common priority.
The Joint Statement was signed on Monday by ICAO Secretary General,
Raymond Benjamin, and UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai, on the
occasion of the official opening of the ICAO Sixth Worldwide Air
Transport Conference.
Visa facilitation,
taxation, the modernization of aviation regulations and the
development of convergent rules for traveller and enterprise
protection were stressed in the Statement as key areas for
improved collaboration.
“Separate sectorial policies on air
transport and tourism result in a fundamental, and too often even
conflicting disconnect which constitutes a severe constraint on
the development of travel and tourism” stressed Mr. Rifai. “The
signing of this Statement therefore represents a defining moment –
one which can set air transport and tourism on a common path on matters of shared concern with considerable mutual benefit.”
More than one billion tourists crossed international borders
during 2012, over half of who travelled by air to their destinations. The total number of international tourists, which
includes both business and leisure travellers, is expected to reach 1.8 billion by 2030.
“Based on ICAO’s latest
forecasts, aircraft departures are forecast to grow from 30
million today to 60 million by 2030,” said ICAO's, Raymond
Benjamin.
“These figures support the UNWTO’s tourism projections and
highlight how important it is that our organizations continue to
address air transport system capacity and related challenges
today, in order to maximize the economic development aspects of
air transport and tourism tomorrow.”
Additional areas
outlined for future cooperation by ICAO and the UNWTO included air
passenger flow management at airports, air capacity for least
developed countries and the continued reduction of environmental
impacts resulting from international air travel and tourism. Due
consideration will be maintained on the importance of air
transport to tourism development in long-haul destinations and
landlocked or island states.
UNWTO,
ICAO
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