×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

The lost summer: Scotland's ethical tourism firms fear for survival

by Sarah Shearman | @shearmans | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 20 May 2020 10:23 GMT

A manually operated turntable ferry transports cars and passengers over the Kyle Rhea strait, Scotland, 2019. Handout / Thomson Reuters Foundation

Image Caption and Rights Information

Scotland fears for the future of its unique manually operated turntable ferry as the coronavirus ends holiday plans for the summer

By Sarah Shearman

LONDON, May 20 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - For more than 50 years, a manually operated turntable ferry in rural Scotland has transported passengers between the mainland and Isle of Skye, one of the last ferries of its kind in the world.

About 35,000 tourists take the MV Glenachulish between April and October each year, some spotting eagles or seals on the scenic route over the Kyle Rhea strait to the famed beauty spot.

But this year the ferry, built in 1969, is unlikely to sail due to coronavirus lockdown restrictions, raising fears over the future of the ferry - which became a community interest company in 2007 - and surrounding businesses.

"As a very little community, which is economically fragile already, this is a major hit for us," said Jo Crawford, who runs the ferry as a social enterprise, a business aiming to do good, from Glenelg village 190 miles (305 km) northwest of Edinburgh.

"[This] has a massive knock on effect for local businesses, accommodation providers, holiday homes, the shop, the café in the village – all of these businesses are really dependent on the visitors who come to use the ferry."

The isolation of the Scottish Highlands and Islands means the region has been relatively shielded from the coronavirus but it is feeling the full force of the economic headwinds.

Without major hospitals within easy reach and an ageing population, locals are nervous about outsiders coming to the area in case they spread the virus - even though their livelihoods depend on tourism.

The village of Glenelg has a full-time population of about 200 and the surrounding district is home to about 1,000 people in total.

"We are dependent on people coming, but it is too soon (for our) safety - we want to make sure we have a crew next year," Crawford told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, adding by the time restrictions are lifted it may be too late to sail this year.

The MV Glenachulish transports passengers between the mainland and Isle of Skye, Glenelg, Scotland, 2019. Handout / Thomson Reuters Foundation

CASH RESERVES

The region's northerly latitude and climate means tourism is restricted to a seven-month season that usually kicks off in March - the month Britain's lockdown measures were introduced.

At the peak of the tourist season, the six-car ferry makes about 30 crossings a day and employs 14 workers who push and pull the vessel across the currents of the strait to a giant turntable where it turns to make the journey back again.

But this year the vessel remains docked in a nearby shipyard where it is maintained over the winter months.

In a good year the business makes enough money to subsidise travel for locals and cover maintenance costs over winter.

But with no tourists in sight it has turned to grants and loans to tide it over this year and even before the lockdown started turned to crowdfunding to raise over 10,000 pounds for repairs.

"Most seasonal businesses don't have that much in the bank. For a small business like ours, with no way of making income over the winter, it's really difficult," she said.

The predicament is felt by social enterprises in the tourism sector globally, which have made it their mission to support their local communities through sustainable business.

Tourism makes up about 5% of Scotland's GDP, with more than 15.5 million overnight tourists in 2018 spending 5.1 billion pounds ($6 billion), according to government data.

It is also home to a growing social enterprise economy, with about 6,000 social enterprises employing 88,300 people.

A fifth of these businesses are clustered in the Highlands and Islands, an area that received about 9.3 million overnight tourists in 2018, according to the tourism body.

"Wealth generation isn't on (social enterprises') agenda so as a result they might not have built up cash reserves and that makes them vulnerable," said David Bryan, a hub manager at Social Enterprise Academy, a training programme.

While charities have been able get support from funders during this period, many social enterprises have fallen through the cracks, he said.

"Those organisations that have taken an enterprising approach, tried to generate their own income stream selling products and services, paradoxically they are more vulnerable to the situation," he said.

COMMUNITY

But it is not just local social enterprises directly linked to tourism that are struggling in the region.

"Even the industries you might not think of as tourism industries have usually got links to tourism," said Bryan.

About 200 km south of Glenelg, at the start of the Western Highlands, lies Oban, a pretty port town popular with tourists for its seafood and crossings to neighbouring islands.

With a population of 8,500 that triples in the summer months, it will be "incredibly challenging for the area with most of this season lost", said Neil Matheson, who is chairman of Atlantis Leisure, a local social enterprise sports centre.

"Tourism is massive for us. The centre is for the local community but we rely on visitors' money coming through the summer when a lot of our locals are out," said Matheson, who also runs a shop and furniture store in the town.

Having closed on March 23 and furloughed 52 of its 55 staff, Matheson said the sports centre, which reinvests any profits it makes into the business, will have to completely rethink how it operates if it reopens with social distancing measures in place.

"Everything we do has been stood on its head with this virus because we are trying to create a community space where groups get together," said Matheson.

"We need to start going back to scratch again and start to envisage building a brand new business," he said.

On the up side, for those businesses able to weather the crisis, the following year could prove to be a bumper one with domestic tourism expected to recover "first and fastest".

"(Travel) is likely to be car born and in Scotland 74% of touring is by private car," said John Lennon, director of Moffat Centre for Tourism at Glasgow Caledonian University.

"People are thinking and talking of holidays and big wide spaces, which we have a lot of in Scotland."

Related stories:

Scottish social entrepreneurs emerge optimistic in global poll amid Brexit uncertainty

Social businesses take tourists off beaten path

Top tourism spots crack down as they become victim of own success

($1 = 0.8167 pounds)

(Reporting by Sarah Shearman @Shearmans. Editing by Belinda Goldsmith Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

-->