Sponsored By

AECO gets funding to develop more wildlife guidelinesAECO gets funding to develop more wildlife guidelines

The Svalbard Environmental Protection Fund granted the Association of Arctic Expedition Cruise Operators 160,000 Norwegian kroner (approximately $20,000) to develop more wildlife guidelines, one of AECO’s many tools to support sustainable tourism in the Arctic. The funding was approved at a board meeting held Friday in Longyearbyen.

Anne Kalosh, Editor, Seatrade Cruise News & Senior Associate Editor, Seatrade Cruise Review

April 27, 2015

1 Min Read
Credit: Seatrade Cruise News

One example is the walrus guideline at www.tinyurl.com/n9wzeex. With the new funding, this will be followed by approximately seven additional guidelines about mammals and birds. These will include general facts about the species, photos and information about how to behave around the animal in order to prevent a negative impact.

AECO’s new wildlife guidelines will be developed by a committee consulting the best available written sources and experts on the specific animals. According to AECO executive director Frigg Jørgensen, the work will be initiated as soon as possible and the project group will aim to have the new guidelines finished and published in 2016.

Since AECO was established in 2003, the organization has been working for responsible, environmentally friendly and safe tourism in the Arctic. To achieve this AECO has developed a number of tools, standards, systems and routines. Among those, AECO guidelines play a central role.

Members are committed to follow guidelines related to operations, visitors, preventing the spread of non-native species and site-specific guidelines (currently 20 of these are in place in Svalbard) in addition to the wildlife guidelines.

All the guidelines are at www.aeco.no/guidelines.

About the Author

Anne Kalosh

Editor, Seatrade Cruise News & Senior Associate Editor, Seatrade Cruise Review

Anne Kalosh covers global stories, reporting both breaking and in-depth news on cruising's significant people, places, ships and trends. A sought-after expert on cruising, she has moderated conferences around the world, including the high-profile State of the Industry panel at Seatrade Cruise Global. She created and led the acclaimed itinerary-planning case study for Seatrade's cruise master classes held at Cambridge and Oxford universities. She has been the cruise columnist for AFAR.com, and her freelance stories have appeared in a wide range of publications, from The New York Times to The Miami Herald.

The latest cruise news, analysis and more straight to your inbox
Get the free newsletter read by industry experts

You May Also Like