Jan 16, 2024 鈥 8 min read
Unesco recommends Venice for its World Heritage in Danger list
Aug 4, 2023 鈥 3 min read
Unesco has made a move to add Venice its list of "World Heritage in Danger." 漏 Stefano Mazzola/Getty Images
As Venice continues to struggle with mass tourism, and post-pandemic numbers show no sign of decreasing, Unesco has sounded another warning bell.
The World Heritage Committee, which has listed 鈥淰enice and its Lagoon鈥 on its World Heritage list since 1987, has drafted a resolution to add the city to its World Heritage in Danger list. It will be voted on in September.
The committee warned of 鈥渋rreversible changes鈥 to the city and lagoon, and 鈥渃ontinuing deterioration due to human intervention, the impacts of climate change and mass tourism.鈥
It said that Italy has not done enough to preserve the area, citing a 鈥渓ack of significant progress in addressing the complex issues.鈥
Managing overtourism
Venice鈥檚 overtourism problem is well known, with around 30 million visitors per year in a city of under 50,000 residents. Locals are increasingly deserting the city as the economy becomes ever more tourism-centric, while there is a housing shortage due to the thousands of Airbnbs in the city. A proposed tax on day trippers, mooted since 2019, has yet to be enacted.
Cruise ships were banned from sailing through the city center in 2021, but they are still allowed to dock in the lagoon 鈥 meaning that the ecological damage that these vessels cause sailing through the shallow lagoon waters remains unchanged.
Unesco, which deals with the Italian state rather than the Venetian authorities specifically, said that there has been a 鈥渓ack of significant progress鈥 and a 鈥渓ack of strategic vision鈥 in tackling the urgent issues and called proposed measures 鈥渋nsufficient.鈥
The committee states that it hopes that adding Venice to the list will finally galvanize change. If added, it will keep its original World Heritage listing, too.
Sending a message to the world
Melissa Conn, director of the Venice office at , a non-profit that restores and preserves artworks in the city, agreed. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think this is a question of a right or wrong decision, but a statement that needed to be made to further underscore the fragile nature of Venice and its artistic patrimony,鈥 she told 香港六合彩即时开奖.
鈥淭he city and national government have taken great strides in the last two years to protect Venice, with the activation of the MOSE flood gates and new rules for the passage of cruise ships in Bacino San Marco [through the city center]. There is no easy solution, and addressing the difficulties that Venice faces will always have to be a priority for future administration.
鈥淰enice should not give up hope.鈥
Valeria Duflot, co-founder of , which promotes sustainable tourism in Venice, said that she is in favor of adding the lagoon to the list.
She said it would 鈥渟end a strong message to the world鈥hat tourism and human economic activity driven by growth can destroy the socio-economic fabric of our cities and communities.鈥
鈥淚t would also serve to illustrate the intimate link 鈥 demonstrated by science 鈥 between travel and tourism and climate change,鈥 she added.
鈥淲hat is happening in Venice is bound to happen everywhere else there is tourism if we do not transform our mindsets and practices that elevate extractive growth over鈥he wellbeing of places, people and what matters to them. We all need to step up our game.鈥
Repeat offender
It鈥檚 not the first time the lagoon city has been threatened with an addition to the 鈥渋n danger鈥 list. In 2014, Italy was given two years' notice to change the direction of the situation in the city. And in 2021, a draft resolution to add Venice to the endangered list, which ultimately failed, cited a 鈥渓ack of overall vision and low efficiency of鈥 management.鈥
If added, it will join two other European cities. Vienna鈥檚 historical core was added to the danger list in 2017, while Odesa in Ukraine was added in 2023, following continued attacks by Russia.
A spokesperson for Venice city council said in a statement that the council will 鈥渃arefully read the proposed decision鈥 and will consult with the government, which is the State Party with which Unesco relates.
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