UN tourism calls on G20 to lead the transformation of the sector
- 9/23/2024
- 193 Day

The G20 economies must lead the way in
ensuring tourism fulfils its huge potential to build a fairer and more
sustainable future for people and planet.
At a meeting of the Ministers of Tourism of the G20
economies in Belem, Brazil, UN Tourism Secretary-General Zurab Pololikashvili
noted that the sector is on track to fully recover pre-pandemic levels by the
end of this year. Given this, the focus must now shift to the future, with an
emphasis on empowering and including local communities, fighting climate
change, and progressing nature net positive and circularity.
Secretary-General Pololikashvili said: “Tourism
heavily depends on biodiversity, climate stability and natural resources.
Accelerating climate action in tourism is critical for the resilience of the
sector and host communities.” In this context, he applauded Brazil’s G20
Presidency focus on inclusion and sustainability.
Accelerating climate action in tourism is critical for
the resilience of the sector and host communities
Closing the the meeting, Minister of Tourism of
Brazil, Celso Sabino said “the Belém Declaration affirms the collective
commitment to promote a more sustainable, resilient and inclusive tourism in
the world”.
Climate change, e-skills development and
inclusion key to tourism’s future
At the G20 meeting, UN Tourism stressed the critical
importance of education and skills for the future of the sector and its transformation.
“ILO data shows that around 880,000 tourism jobs annually will require
specialized training until 2030 and that 25% of tourism stakeholders report
significant shortages in skilled employees, particularly in customer service
and managerial roles,” Mr Pololikashvili noted.
The Secretary General also recalled the role tourism
can have in development and welcomed the G20’s tourism focus on financing for
development.
“For many developing countries, including Least
Developed Countries and Small Island Developing States, tourism is a major
source of employment, foreign exchange earnings and tax revenues. Yet, the
sector continues to be overlooked as a tool for development, with the total
Official Development Assistance disbursements for tourism remaining below 0.25%
of total ODA.” he said.
Secretary-General thanked and commended the Belem
Declaration adopted by the G20 Tourism Ministers which highlights the
Statistical Framework for Measuring the Sustainability of Tourism (SF-MST) as a
tool to produce credible, comparable, and integrated data on tourism's
economic, social, and environmental impact as well as the G20 Tourism and SDGs
Platform developed by the G20 Tourism in collaboration with UN Tourism.
G20 economies: Tourism powerhouses
The G20 economies represent over 70% of all
international tourist arrivals and receipts generated worldwide and 82% of
tourism’s global GDP. In 2023, the sector accounted directly for 3.1% of the
GDP of the G20, 5% of all exports of the group and 23% of all its service exports.
International tourism recovered 97% of its pre
pandemic levels in the G20 economies in the seven months 2024. G20 tourism
direct GDP value recovered fully already in 2023 at US$ 2.8 trillion.
