While you’re researching all the best Costa Rica travel tips for where to visit and what to eat, don’t forget that you’re heading to the very heart of the sustainable tourism movement and that your choices while there are powerful.
Keep these 3 tips in mind as a very minimum standard for staying sustainable in Costa Rica.
1. Spend Your Dollars Wisely
Research conducted by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) indicates that as much as 95% of the dollars spent by international tourists don’t benefit the economies where the trip was taken. In fact, that money rarely even stays in that economy.
When tourist dollars remain in the hands of the community, the local economy and people benefit, thus fulfilling a component of the sustainable travel pillars. What’s more, putting tourism dollars into the hands of the local people empowers them economically, making it less likely that land gets sold to foreign corporations. It also decreases the likelihood that people have to turn to illegal means, such as illegal logging and hunting, to make a living.
All that to say that an important aspect of travelling sustainably is spending your dollars wisely in terms of the tours you take, the places you stay, and the things you purchase along the way.
Lokal Travel, for example, ensures that 80% of the money spent on your tour stays in the local economy. Lokal also uses a strict vetting system for tour operators, to be sure that they’re committed to working with local communities, preserving cultural traditions, and conserving the environments in which they operate.
2. Use the Guidelines in Place
Not specifically a Costa Rica travel tip, but a tip for traveling anywhere in the world, is to use the guidelines and infrastructure that’s been put in place for you. In Costa Rica, that means knowing about the many programs and organizations that can help you reduce your footprint and make a positive impact.
Of the best known programs in Costa Rica is the Certification for Sustainable Tourism (CST). This program rates businesses on a 5-point scale, according to how well they comply with sustainable practices and guidelines developed by the Government of Costa Rica.
The CST rating involves analyzing good management practices, the environmental and social impact of the service, and consumer perceptions of the service. You’ll recognize the rating by its green leaf seal, which can be found at many businesses across the country.
3. Avoid Single Use Plastic
By the year 2050, it’s estimated that plastic will make up 13% of the world’s carbon budget. That’s because greenhouse gases are used to refine the raw materials that make plastics as well as in the production process – they’re even a major component of the systems we use to dispose of and manage plastic waste.
This is how single-use plastic and its expanding production worldwide is increasing the effects of climate change.
But Costa Rica has pledged to become the first country to ban single-use plastics in the world. The nation hopes that its efforts will result in the elimination of disposable straws, cutlery, bags, bottles and cups made from plastic by 2021 – and you should be part of that movement.
Bring your own grocery and shopping bags, notice restaurants that are still serving drinks with plastic straws, recycle where you can, and consider bringing a refillable glass bottle for your drinking water. Any efforts you make toward avoiding single-use plastics will make a huge impact in achieving plastic-free goals that are ahead of almost any other country worldwide.