2019-10-01_National_Geographic_Traveler_Interactive

(vip2019) #1

Not so long ago, the roar of a wild lion at


night came accompanied by the steady


thumping of a safari lodge’s diesel gener-


ator. Plastic water bottles were routinely


handed out to guests. The contradiction


between celebrating nature and adding


more pollution to the planet has not been


lost on the growing number of today’s


more sustainably minded travelers. The


safari world has been listening. In 2020,


Xigera Safari Lodge will reopen in the


biodiverse bonanza of the Okavango,


powered by a 4,000-plus-kilowatt solar


farm. A Tesla lithium-ion battery system


will sport charging points for electric


safari vehicles. It will also be free of


single-use plastic. “Our aim is to create


the eco-luxury safari lodge of the future,”


says managing director Mike Myers.


In Rwanda, one of the last strongholds


of the endangered mountain gorilla,


Singita Kwitonda Lodge is also taking


sustainability to the next level. Natural


materials were used to build the walls,


and an innovative ventilation system


draws in fresh air to cool the rooms,


elimating the need for energy-intensive


air-conditioning.


In Namibia, andBeyond Sossusvlei


Desert Lodge is located in the continent’s


only dark sky reserve. “Deserts are par-


ticularly fragile ecologically. We have not


only taken care to cause as little impact


as possible during construction, but we


also have a full recovery program once the


build is complete,” says Joss Kent, CEO


of andBeyond.


Experiencing nature can and should


be about protecting it.


COSTAS CHRIST ( @costaschrist) is an


editor at large and senior advisor for


sustainable tourism at National


Geographic. To learn more, visit


beyondgreentravel.com.


In the early morning, an
oryx roams Sossusvlei,
Namibia, where red sand
dunes can reach more
than 1,300 feet tall.

86 NATGEOTRAVEL.COM


TREND 5


SUSTAINABLE


SIGHTINGS

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