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The 'tyranny of distance' has so far kept most
of the islands out of the reach of tourism - but the world's largest and
ultimate consumer 'industry' will not be denied for long:
- Only Nadi in Fiji among the Pacific Member Countries of the World Bank can
cope with a fully-laden Boeing 747 jet
- Tourist arrivals in the East Asia Pacific region increased by 8.7% between
1988 and 1993 but in the South Pacific by just 6.8% - from 330,000 to
450,000. This suggests that tourism in the South Pacific is set to expand
considerably
- Around a third of the hotel rooms are in 7% of the total number of
establishments: the large 'resort' hotels. These hotels are owned and operated
by overseas investors and managers - only a small proportion of the income
remains
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Many forests on the west coast of the US, in the Philippines, Indonesia and
Malaysia have been logged out. So Sarawak and Papua New Guinea have become the
substitute source of supply for the plywood and veneer mills of Japan and Korea.
The small South Pacific islands are now following suit.
- In 1993 natural forest still covered 45% of Fiji, 78% of the Solomon
Islands, 75% of Vanuatu and 77% of Western Samoa
- In 1995 the 'sustainable' annual cut for the Solomon Islands was estimated
at 286,000 m3 - in 1994 the actual cut was 700,000 m3and
seemed likely to increase to 1,300,000 m3. At this rate, the islands
will be logged out in less than five years
- Similar rates of deforestation apply in Vanuatu and Western Samoa. Major
logging contracts are planned for Fiji
- Profits described as 'excessive' by the World Bankitself are made by the
logging companies and average 30 per cent of the value
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As fish stocks elsewhere have been exhausted, so the South Pacific has
become the focus for industrial fishing fleets from around the world. The region
now supplies over half the world's canned tuna. The exact size of Pacific stocks
is unknown, as is the rate at which they are being depleted.

- Reported South Pacific deep-sea tuna catches almost doubled, from
0.6 to 1.1 million metric tons, between 1984 and 1991
- Illegal catches are much larger: the South Pacific Commission
estimates those by Japan may be twice as large as reported, by Taiwan 7 times
larger and by South Korea 176 times larger
- Deep-water fishing fleets generate little economic activity on the
islands whose territorial waters they fish, and pay minimal royalties
- Coastal and reef fisheries provide 28.9% of protein consumption in
Fiji and 73.6% in the Solomon Islands
- Fishing is undertaken by 99% of coastal households in Kiribati and 87% in
the Marshall Islands, primarily for local consumption
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