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Thailand’s Tourist Boom Worsens Island Nation’s Water Crisis

WD NEWS: Thailand’s Koh Samui is battling a worsening water shortage that had already rendered taps running dry for months. The boom in tourism industry, especially after the pandemic eased, has catalysed the water crisis in Koh Samui.

A popular tourist destination, Koh Samui, hosts some 2,700,000 visitors per year.

Koh Samui has been facing a severe lack of rain and to top it off a resurgence in tourism has put intense pressure on supplies, prompting Sutham Samthong, Deputy Mayor of Koh Samui, to urge the public to use supplies sparingly.

Samthong said that water was being brought in from other areas and private reservoirs, to be distributed to the public. With careful management he believed the island could navigate the next two months, after which rain was expected.

Samui, famous for its white sandy beaches, scenic temples and luxury resorts, often struggles with a lack of fresh water during the dry season between March and May. It’s feared the El Nino weather phenomenon, which is associated with less rain, will result in more severe shortages this year.

According to Ratchaporn Poolsawadee, the president of the Tourism Association of Koh Samui, rather than benefiting from a resurgence in tourist arrivals this year, businesses were having to use their profits to buy water. Not only was this costly, but supplies were also scarce.

According to Sutham, Samui needed 30,000 cubic metres of water a day. The majority, 24,000 cubic metres, would be brought to the island through an underwater pipeline from Surat Thani on the mainland, while reservoir supplies would be used for the remaining amount.

An additional 30,000 cubic metres would also be brought in on Monday to boost the reservoir supplies, according to the Provincial Waterworks Authority.

Source: Live Mint

Photo courtesy: Tourism Authority of Thailand

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