Subscribe & Follow
Jobs
- Gallery Manager Cape Town
- Visitor Experience Consultant Cape Town
- Digital Marketing and Content Designer Johannesburg
- Sales Executive - Junior to Intermediate Johannesburg
- Group Travel Account Manager South Africa
Stellenbosch Wine Route embraces climate change commitment, signs Porto Protocol
The Porto Protocol was launched by former US President Barack Obama in 2018.
"As the leading wine tourism destination in South Africa, Stellenbosch recognises the leadership role it must play on climate change issues. We are committed as the entire wine and tourism ecosystem of Stellenbosch to lead the way in environmental protection and to foster good environmental principles among all our stakeholders," says Ratcliffe.
The recent launch of Visit Stellenbosch, a new Destination Marketing Organisation (DMO), unifies all Stellenbosch tourism stakeholders under one umbrella with the objective of growing the tourism and experience economy in Stellenbosch for the benefit of all communities.
"Central to that mandate is ensuring that Stellenbosch is known as a place where people come to discover, learn, create, startup, launch and bring into being. This is a destination that pioneers innovative and scalable high-impact solutions to tackle pressing, social, economic and environmental issues. We have a responsibility to confront the biggest issues," adds Ratcliffe.
Mitigating the harmful impact of climate change
Among the initiatives already being employed by members of Stellenbosch Wine Routes aimed at sustainability, biodiversity and conservation include the Integrated Production of Wine, a voluntary sustainability scheme established by the South African wine industry in 1998, WWF Conservation Champions and the establishment of three large conservancies in Stellenbosch, including the Greater Simonsberg Conservancy, the Bottelary Hills Conservancy and the Banhoek Conservancy.
CEO of Taylor’s Port and Chairman of the Porto Protocol, Adrian Bridge, highlights the wine industry’s role in leading from the front to mitigate the harmful impact of climate change.
"The wine industry suffers directly from climate change and is therefore well placed to lead the movement aimed at finding solutions towards a better environment. We are all responsible and we cannot afford to waste any more time. We need to act now," says Bridge.