Conservation work features heavily at luxury resort (Dec 2008)
EMIRATES Hotels & Resorts started work on a
habitat regeneration project at its first luxury
Australian conservation resort, Wolgan
Valley Resort & Spa earlier this year. TONY
WILLIAMS, senior vice president of the hotel
group, spoke to CHERYL MANDY about its fierce commitment to protect this 4,000 acre ecologically sensitive site previously a cattle farm.
How is work progressing?
All is going very well, but in the planning stages
we took a lot of care to ensure that the services we
will be able to offer will make Wolgan Australia’s
most luxurious resort. We started off removing
invasive noxious plants, weeds and non
indigenous flora, then planted more than 1,000
indigenous trees. The next phase of the
conservation programme will focus on the removal
of feral animals. This remains today the greatest
threat to Australian wildlife, and their removal
will ultimately lead to the creation of a wildlife
corridor connecting three national parks.
How have australians reacted to your project?
The result you get from your conservation work is
massively proportional to the effort that you put in.
Australia has a shocking record – it is the continent
with the highest number of species extinct in the last
100 years, and that happened due to loss of habitat
and feral invasion. Wolgan Valley along the Great
Australian Divide has conservation significance for
Australia, and our
proposal is to prevent
reinvasion into this area.
The Australians are very
happy for us to be there.
Al Maha Desert Resort& Spa here in Dubai is
the model which we set
up and are taking to
other places, that is, a
concept of sustainable
development binding
together with hard core
conservation work.
Because it was a new
concept in Australia it
was quite difficult to get all the parties –
conservationists and luxury hotel operators - to
understand what the dynamics required. When the
tourism authorities went to Al Maha they realised
how the concept worked.
Didn’t the australians want to develop this area themselves?
I’m sure they did. However, the Australian national
parks are trying to manage concerns and issues over
millions of acres. We look at a small piece of
land and make it absolutely sacrosanct in
terms of management. They couldn’t focus
on this 4,000 acres of land with the intensity that we do.
Why is the business concept of this organisation so important to you?
Too many conservation trusts, wildlife charities,
NGO’s, etc rely on commercial funding for their
conservation work and when times are hard, like
now, everyone’s charity goes out of the window. I
have been involved in projects in Africa that have
had 15 years of intense conservation work stopped
because they no longer have the money. The best
managed conservation areas in South Africa are the
private reserves as they have the money to really
focus on hard core conservation and animal
protection which a national park is not always able
to do. I’m an ecologist by profession. I saw great
projects just come and then go because there didn’t
have commercial backing, and a simple fact is that
the conservation gain is enormous if it is done
properly.
Tell us about the resort’s focus.
We want the guests’ experience here to be totally
Australian orientated. The focus is on hiking, four
wheel drive trips, bush experiences, horse riding.
We don’t want to ram conservation down their
throats – what we want to do is provide them with
a personalised experience combining nature,
wildlife, service, luxury and history. And we had
Australian designers working on the interiors,
based around an original settler house – this is to
ensure a sense of place is preserved.
Are you expecting many people from the Middle East to go here?
I don’t expect we will phenomenally change the
market mix of this region. Australia receives
visitors mostly from the USA, Europe, Japan and
Australians themselves. At Wogan we are
allowing children but do not recommend it for
those under eight in terms of parents’
enjoyment.
Do you have any other projects in the pipeline?
Yes we are finalising a project in the Seychelles,
which we also displayed at World Travel
Market.
[The Wolgan Valley Resort & Spa is due to
open in late 2009.]
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