Back to news
31 Oct 2014 | Press releases

Government of Myanmar and regional knowledge centre collaborate to promote ecotourism and the conservation of protected areas

2 mins Read

70% Complete

On Thursday, 30 October, in the presence of Union Minister U Htay Aung of the Ministry of Hotels and Tourism and the Union Minister U Win Tun of the Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry, the Ministry of Hotels and Tourism in Myanmar signed a memorandum of understanding with the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) to facilitate the development of Myanmar’s Ecotourism Policy and Management Strategy for protected areas.

Director of Human Resource Development Department, Ministry of Hotels and Tourism, U Than Win, ICIMOD’s Director of Strategic Cooperation, Basanta Shrestha, at the signing of an agreement on the development of an ecotourism policy and management strategy for protected areas in Nya Pi Taw, Myanmar

The policy and strategy will help celebrate and promote the natural and cultural assets of Myanmar’s unique protected areas, from Lampi Marine National Park in the south to the Hkakaborazi National Park in the north. It will also provide local people with alternative livelihood options, outside of the traditional consumptive use of natural resources.

The Ministry of Hotels and Tourism (MOHT), in collaboration with the Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry (MOECAF) and the Myanmar Tourism Federation (MTF), is leading the process of collecting inputs from a variety of stakeholders on their views and experiences with ecotourism.

U Htay Aung, Union Minister of the MOHT, welcomed the signing of the agreement and the growing partnership with ICIMOD. He noted that the Ecotourism Policy and Management Strategy’s key role is promoting quality tourism that also engages the communities living in and around Myanmar’s protected areas.

Individual protected areas are part of national protected area networks formed to conserve representative examples of nature-based assets and ecosystems. Well-managed protected area networks are critical to both biodiversity conservation and arresting climate change. Despite these critical roles, it is often challenging for governments to generate an economic return from these areas, or from wider government revenues, to cover their conservation management costs. Ecotourism to protected areas is an activity capable of contributing towards such revenue, as product viability depends upon the conservation of the biodiversity and the ecosystems that tourists come to visit.

Basanta Shrestha, Director of Strategic Cooperation at ICIMOD, emphasized that the success of Myanmar’s Ecotourism Management Strategy depends upon the seamless integration of the policies and working practices of MOHT and MOECAF. This MOU has been designed to help facilitate an enabling environment that would allow this to happen.

Myanmar is one of ICIMOD’s eight regional member countries. It has been a member since the Centre’s founding, with MOECAF as its focal ministry.

For more information please contact:

Ms Nira Gurung , Senior Communications Officer
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)
Tel +977-1-5003222, Fax +977-1-5003277
email: ngurung@icimod.org

14 Jun 2019 Shifting cultivation
Managing the shifts in shifting cultivation

Saraswat also cautioned against a narrow sectoral approach. The transitions must be enabled by research and development that is contextual, ...

31 Oct 2015 Press releases
New report outlines framework for sustainable development in the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="560"] Report on "A Strategic Framework for Sustainable Development in ...

15 May 2023 Media Advisory
MOCHA hours away from making devastating landfall in Myanmar and Bangladesh

Read in chinese   Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Mocha is ...

25 Apr 2023 Press releases
Worst April heatwave in Asian history: Scientists urge action to avert catastrophic impacts across HKH

Read in Chinese   With Bangladesh, China, India, Myanmar and Pakistan all hit by crippling ...

12 May 2025 Press releases
Requiem for a glacier: Tribute held in Nepal for one of the Hindu Kush Himalaya’s most-studied rivers of ice

Langtang’s Yala Glacier set to join growing numbers of glaciers around the world declared dead due to temperature rise ...

14 Oct 2025 Press releases
Everest region a hotspot of cryosphere-linked hazards, ICIMOD’s new study on Nepal’s 2024 Thame flood confirms

A massive rock avalanche above a glacial lake in the headwaters of the Thame watershed ...

18 Dec 2018 RMV
Rising from ruins: the making of a resilient mountain village

  At the heart of this transformation is a story of partnership. In April 2016, The International Centre for Integrated Mountain ...

28 Sep 2024 Press releases
Death toll climbs as torrential rains pound nepal

Kathmandu, 28 September 2024 – Much of Kathmandu stands underwater today and the capital’s main river, the Bagmati, is flowing ...