Phuket's English-language newspaper... since 1993
    Click for Mobile News   
 
Headlines
Inside Story
Around the Island
Around the Region
Business & Money
Sports
Opinion
Letters To The
  Editor
Property
 
June 16
June 30
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 


Opinion




Believe it or not

It strikes the Gazette as sadly ironic that less than two weeks after the deadly poisoning of fish farms off Saphan Hin that US-based conglomerate Ripley Entertainment announced its ambitious plan to build Southeast Asia’s largest aquarium somewhere on the island – though they aren’t saying exactly where.

If the 2.1-billion-baht “megaquarium” becomes a reality within three years, as Ripley’s hopes it will [see News pages], it will likely become one of Phuket’s top tourism draws – a must-see attraction ranking alongside the Laem Phromthep, Phuket FantaSea and the Mingmongkol Buddha image now under construction in Karon and expected to open by the end of 2008 [see p10, Around the Island].

Unfortunately, Phuket needs ever more attractions just to keep up with the ongoing expansion in its number of hotel rooms, the official number of which is already around 35,000 – not including all the villas, condos, time-share developments and small, unregistered accommodation establishments that push the actual number of accommodation establishments much higher.

While the aquarium at the Phuket Marine Biological Center is interesting, informative and well-maintained, it is too small to keep a family entertained for more than an hour or two. Other family-oriented attractions that have been long discussed but never built include a world-class water park or other types of amusement parks.

Increasing the number of such attractions is a key development issue for Phuket, which has developed too much of a reputation for more “adult-oriented” activities from golf to bar hopping.

Fortunately, the opening of large, new retail centers such as Central Festival and Jungceylon have improved Phuket’s appeal, though the number of baby strollers being pushed up and down Soi Bangla by night continues to speak for itself.

At the same time, Phuket’s greatest natural tourism asset, its beaches, continue to suffer through a combination of poor regulation, environmental degradation and outright greed. At Patong, the days when kids could safely swim in the sea, build sandcastles on the sands at dusk or swim safely have been long since passed, having been ended by the activities of jet-ski and parasail operators.

Then again, fewer people are choosing to swim in Patong Bay due to the failure of the municipality to treat its wastewater, resulting in much of it being discharged into the south end of the bay, once home to impressive coral beds and the marine life they sustained.

In this regard, Ripley’s might be the perfect match for Phuket. As the fish farm fiasco indicates, the current rate of decline of our island’s coastal resources might make Ripley’s aquarium the last healthy environment left for fish left in Phuket.

- The Editor

Login
Gazetteers log in here.
For full access to all the community facilities on this site, become a Gazetteer. It's free!
Phuket Television
Search this site
Yellow Pages
Search for any of  4,104
BUSINESSES IN PHUKET
Search by category
Issues & Answers
‘Visas’ for dependents of retirees
Queer News
Aussie stabbing: no worries, mate

 
     
  The Phuket Gazette Co Ltd
367/2 Yaowarat Road, Amphur Muang, Phuket 83000, Thailand
Tel: 076-236555 Fax: 076-213971
info@phuketgazette.net
Copyright © 2008  The Phuket Gazette Co Ltd.  All rights reserved.