
Why do islands around the world compete?
There's certainly truth to the argument that they share cultures long protected by the sea from outside influences. The word "insularity" - literally an island mindset - has been borrowed and distorted to describe a lack of interest in the world outside.Yet many island stories are defined by the numbers who leave, taking their collective voice to centres of power and often remitting their earnings and investments back home.The common heritage also has to do with looking to the oceans for a living from seafood, seafaring and tourism. Among the Island Games competitors, they can also claim to be treated distantly by governments in London, Edinburgh and Copenhagen.
The history of art department at St Andrews University is leading a project to hear such island stories across oceans, mainly linking Scottish islands with the Caribbean.Last year, it brought a group of young people from Barbados to the Isle of Harris.According to Jamie Allan Brown, a St Andrews researcher, the focus was on passing down generations' "traditional ecological knowledge, especially about local plants and wildlife, language and place names, and living off the land and sea".The University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) has a master's degree course in island studies, in which you can learn about the intertwined social, cultural, economic and environmental issues that concern Scottish islands.It also draws comparisons with others in the Baltic, the Faroes and Canada's Atlantic coast.
Around half of the independent members of the United Nations can be considered islands, including the UK and Ireland. Some are classified as small and developing and they form a block of 39 nations within the UN, mostly in the Caribbean, Pacific and Indian Oceans.So what do they have in common? It may seem easier to see the differences - tropical to polar, volcanic or sandy, sovereign or dependent, valued or neglected, rich or poor, and with often complex interactions between the indigenous and the migrants.But there are growing reasons for islanders to get together to celebrate a common bond of island-ness, and to combine forces in common causes.
Climate change
The voice of micro-nations has never been heard as loud as it is when they get together at the COP summits. The forums gave prominence to national leaders from the Pacific and Caribbean, highlighting the risk islands face from rising sea levels and the increasing incidence of extreme storms.Tuvalu, a sovereign nation that rises out the Pacific Ocean to a height of only five metres, is expected to be mainly under water at high tide within only 25 years.
Last month, for that reason, Australia began a ballot scheme to allow some of Tuvalu's citizens to apply for permanent visas. It was vastly over-subscribed as applications came in from more than a third of households. The UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) faces a challenge from the Marshall Islands (which has an average elevation of two metres) on Tuesday this week, calling on member countries to phase out the burning of oil. It brings the prospect of a split from the usual consensus-building of that forum by oil producers in the Persian Gulf, signalling a formal retreat from COP commitments. The USA, under President Donald Trump, has pulled out of the Council.But it's not just low-lying island nations that face a threat from climate change. Hurricanes can lay waste a successful island economy within a few days. In Hebridean islands, such as the Uists, storms can devastate sand dunes and machair, breach coastal defences and road links, and buckle wood-framed homes. James Ellsmoor is founder and chief executive of Island Innovation, a consultancy that helps islanders learn from each other. He says the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) goes to COP gatherings with a "collective moral authority, to say they're negligible as emitters, but on the front line as the most impacted".
Renewable energy
Island Innovation has 16 employees, working with clients around the world. It supports island authorities, often with limited resources to engage with multi-national organisations for funding or influence. Once a year there's a get-together, this autumn in Gran Canaria.James Ellsmoor completed the degree course in island studies at UHI while working in renewable energy in the Caribbean. He graduated at St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall and looks to UHI as a model for dispersed learning that could be important to many other island groups. He says Scotland is also setting an example that's being watched in Greece, South Korea and Italy for "island-proofing" legislation.Although he had grown up on the English-Welsh border, his interest in island economies was sparked by the higher cost of power when he went to work in the Caribbean. Power bills per unit can be up to five times higher than those in larger countries, usually due to the lack of scale when installing and running an oil-burning power station.
That's changing, he points out. The harnessing of wind, solar and tidal energy can make islands self-sufficient in power, and the falling cost of long sub-sea cables should make it possible for more exporting of power.Scotland's islanders know a lot about that, sharing a familiar tale around the world where islanders see wind turbines taking over their horizon but little of the benefit accruing to the island or islanders.As Orcadians never tire of reminding us, they have the widest range of renewable power sources, including the EMEC marine technology testing centre, but still have higher power bills than other parts of Britain.James Ellsmoor sees possibilities from island enterprises using their networks to build markets for island-specific answers to net zero questions. He cites the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island, often overlooked across Canada's vastness, but making waves with renewable and waste inventions that can be sold through strengthening links with Scottish and Canary islands as it builds up a portfolio of far-flung clients.Among the issues they could consider together in future is the dependence on fossil fuels for shipping and air transport, which are vital links for people and goods coming and going out of islands. Orkney offers a pioneering approach to electric inter-island flight.
Coming and going
One trend that islands have long experienced is of depopulation, as younger people leave, pushed by poverty or pulled by opportunity elsewhere. Seen as an acute problem in the Western Isles of Scotland, those who remain on the islands tend to lack the range of age groups and skills to sustain public services.South Korea is relatively new to this. Extended families on its islands are being broken up by out-migration and it is looking to other islands to learn lessons of supporting the economy and social structures around its shores.Emigration has also been a dominant issue for Caribbean islands, bringing demographic problems back home, but also that large network of an island's supporters and investors.
However aircraft and ships are not only taking people away. There are a lot of arrivals. The growing problem for many islands is also one of their biggest opportunities - the global growth of tourism.It thrives on one of the most valuable but intangible resources available to islands - that they appear to offer a destination that gets-away-from-it-all, often with pristine beaches, stunning coastlines and dramatic story-lines, fascinating cultures with rich histories.While Shetland is becoming world-renowned for its TV murder mysteries, Orkney offers it all, and that history is opening up with new archaeological finds that show how important the islands were as a crossing point for sea trading routes long before roads were a reliable way of getting around. Aruba offers a lot too. In the southern Caribbean, around 90% of its economy is in tourism. When the pandemic hit, as an extreme example of such tropical islands within easy reach of North American and European markets, the vulnerability of the economy was laid bare.
Over-tourism concerns
Post-pandemic, tourism has bounced back. Majorca this year expects 100m tourism arrivals. And it no longer takes a big marketing budget these days to promote how special a beach or coastal view can be. Instagram does that for free.
The result can be seen on an island such as Skye, where tourism is tipping into concerns about over-tourism, driving some permanent residents to depart. The solitude and pristine environment people want to experience is undermined by having to share it with so many others, also using narrow roads, also in camper vans.AirBnB, along with other short term letting agencies, offers islanders the means to turn any old shed into a bijou and romantic escape. Those used to be the places where young adult islanders would find homes while awaiting something more permanent and where seasonal workers stayed and sustained the summer tourist season. Not any more.A common theme running through island economies is the lack of housing, though it depends on land ownership patterns and on affordability where incomes can be very low.In Spain's Balearic and Canary Islands, the effects of over-tourism, and particularly on housing costs, have become a hot political topic, with protest movements threatening to scare off the tourists on whom islanders continue to depend.
One answer is to get tourists to pay for the true economic cost of their visit, through charges and taxes. Scotland's councils are currently sizing up the cases for and against tourist taxes and charges for visiting cruise liners.As James Ellsmoor points out, the international tourism businesses which own resorts and cruise liners are also powerful lobbyists against taxes and charges. In the Caribbean, the threat of carving more government income out of tourism is met with a threat to take business to neighbouring islands. Similar arguments are being made in Scotland.
New World Order
One of the gains of the post-1945 order is that tiny islands could assert their independence and sovereignty, including many breaking colonial bonds.While that world order lasted, they had rights in international law and a champion in the United Nations. In the era symbolised by Donald Trump, there's a new world order, in which large superpowers are more interested in carving up spheres of influence and setting legal questions to one side in favour of their national interests.That makes small islands vulnerable to the interests and whims of those superpowers. A hundred years after the Treaty of Svalbard handed control of these Arctic islands to Norway, the prospect of mineral extraction in the region is a source of tensions with Russia.China's claim on Taiwan is the big threat to peace in East Asia, and small Pacific states such as Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu have been drawn into China's web of debt finance influence.
The US President says he wants to take over Greenland. If that is even possible, it would be easy to do the same with smaller states in strategically helpful places.International law can still protect islanders in some cases. It was because Mauritus had won its legal claim over the Chagos islands in the Indian Ocean that the UK government felt it could not avoid a deal to relinquish ownership while still providing access to US forces on the strategically significant air base at Diego Garcia.Britain continues to be a big player in shaping the role of the world's islands - former colonies and continuing dependent territories - because it used to be exceptionally effective at taking over islands when its Royal Navy ruled the waves.For some islands, the threat from larger countries, including the UK, is to crack down on tax evasion through low-tax havens, which happen to be island territories including the Isle of Man, Channel Islands and the Virgin and Cayman groups.The islands around Scotland do not offer such tax benefits. But after the sports competition is over in Orkney this week, they can offer further economic, environmental and social co-operation across the waters that define them.
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BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
The world's most liveable cities for 2025 – and what it's really like to live there
While Vienna has topped the Global Liveability Index for years, 2025 crowned a new number one. From Copenhagen to Melbourne, we asked locals what it's actually like to reside in these famously liveable cities. The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has long ranked cities around the globe, offering a data-backed snapshot of where life is most comfortable and secure. The world's top-ranked cities have been remarkably consistent over the past few years. But in 2025, one major shift jolted the rankings: for the first time in three years, Vienna was dethroned. Copenhagen rose to the top thanks to perfect scores in stability, education and infrastructure – a tough trifecta to beat. However, the biggest shake-ups in 2025 weren't just about rising or falling scores – they were about safety, with geopolitical tensions rising worldwide. Vienna, in particular, suffered from a bomb threat that cancelled the 2024 Taylor Swift concert as well as a recently planned attack on a train station. Still, cities in Western Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Canada continue to fare well in the rankings, with Osaka the only Asian city cracking the top 10. So, what's it really like to call one of these places home? We asked locals from five of this year's top-ranked cities to find out. Copenhagen Taking the top spot in the liveability index, the Danish capital also recently ranked as the world's happiest city. The two go hand in hand, as Copenhagen's high stability, infrastructure and environment scores directly translate into daily happiness for residents. "Trains show up at 12:16 when they are scheduled for 12:16. No one blinks if you turn up in sneakers at a fancy restaurant, and a swim in a clean harbour is possible even in January if you are feeling brave," said Copenhagen resident Thomas Franklin, CEO of fintech company "Copenhagen wins me over every time with its calmness. Streets are wide, bikes outnumber cars and the city runs on common sense." Franklin also appreciates the city's community spirit and a lack of pressure that means you can meet a friend by the water with no planning and have coffee for two hours. While the skies might often be grey, he says the city is brightened by open-air markets, public saunas and the sound of kids running in the park. "It is a city that never tries too hard but always delivers," he said. American journalist Olivia Liveng moved here eight years ago and says that raising a child here has been "an unexpectedly wonderful experience" due to the city's family-friendly nature. "Our 2.5-year-old son attends a highly subsidised daycare that costs us about US$600 per month, covering everything," she said. "You can truly see where your tax money goes." A good work-life balance also benefits families, with many companies encouraging employees to take three weeks off in July. In addition, Liveng finds the infrastructure to be thoughtfully designed. "There are elevators in all metro stations, clean and reliable public transport and stroller-friendly buses," she said, contrasting it to a recent visit to New York, where a lack of lifts meant navigating the subway with a pushchair was a challenge. For a dose of local hygge, Liveng recommends a swim at Sandkaj Harbour Bath in the Nordhavn district. "It's a favourite spot to dip and lay in the Sun, especially during the warmer months," she said. For a winter visit, Franklin suggests the Islands Brygge harbour baths. "Grab a hot chocolate, sit at the water's edge and just watch Copenhagen drift by," he said. "The small rituals here are what stick with you." Vienna The Austrian capital may have slipped from first to second place in the index, but its perfect healthcare score still outranks every other city. It also maintains perfect scores in both education and infrastructure. The result is a place that residents rave about. "I'm a native New Yorker who moved to Vienna for the lifestyle about four years ago and have no plans on returning," said Nataleigh O'Connell, a communications consultant at UNIDO. "I've found a quality of life that I didn't think was possible in a major capital city." She points to affordability as a major draw, noting that rent is extremely reasonable, with a city-centre one-bedroom flat costing less than €850 per month. Vienna's extensive public transportation network is also clean and affordable, priced at just €1 a day for city residents. "It's a city that offers enough of everything, whether it be new restaurants, world-class performances or art exhibitions, without ever feeling overwhelming," said O'Connell. To experience Vienna like a local, she recommends visiting heurigen, local vineyards within the city limits. "The hiking trails that connect them offer spectacular views of the city," she said. Geneva Switzerland consistently ranks high for quality of life, thanks to policy and infrastructure that support well-being. Both Zurich and Geneva made the top five this year, but Geneva residents say their city has a different feel – more compact, more relaxed but with all the benefits of a global hub. "Geneva is a well-run city in a well-run country," said resident James F Royal, who moved here from Florida several years ago and is the author of the book Options Trading 101. "It offers many of the benefits of the big city – music, arts, business – in a cosier environment, meaning you get many advantages of urban life without the usual disadvantages." More like this:• The world's five happiest cities for 2025• The Danish city that's been designed for an easy life• Why Minneapolis is one of the world's happiest places With perfect healthcare and infrastructure scores, the city is also clean, safe and easy to navigate. "Whether you want to walk to your destination or use the dense public transportation system, you can get around easily with no car required," Royal said. In addition, Switzerland's reliable train network and central location make it easy to travel almost anywhere in Europe in just a few hours. Geneva is also one of Switzerland's most diverse cities, with more than 40% of residents born abroad. "Inhabitants get the benefits of that diversity, such as a wide range of cuisines and people with interesting backgrounds," Royal said. The city's natural beauty – especially the crescent-shaped Lake Geneva and its mountain backdrop – also add to the appeal of daily life. The lake has plenty of spots to picnic and sunbathe, with La Grange Park offering unique lake views and expansive rose gardens. Royal recommends visitors enjoy the restaurants and pop-up bars that appear during the summer months, and the Christmas markets in the winter. Melbourne Ranked fourth in the index, Melbourne received perfect marks in healthcare and education. But its high scores in culture and environment are what inched it above other Australian cities – including Sydney and Adelaide, which also cracked the top 10. Melbourne also scored well on infrastructure – and lawyer Oliver Morrisey says he chose to base his practice here due to an overall efficiency he rarely finds in other major cities. "I can walk from the Supreme Court to a client meeting near Collins Street in under 15 minutes; and I can work intensely during the day then take my daughter for a walk through Fitzroy Gardens after school," he said. "That is what liveability means to me. It is not just about lifestyle. It is about ease of movement between the parts of life that matter." Even for those outside the city centre, Melbourne's transportation network makes getting around simple. "The transport system connects the inner and outer suburbs for an easy commute within 50 minutes without segregating suburbs," said Melbourne resident Katherine Tuominen, founder of Catalyst Brand Strategy, who has lived in 10 cities around the world but finds Melbourne the most liveable. She also loves Melbourne's multicultural energy, which brings together people from all walks of life and fuels a vibrant mix of activities, events and cuisines. "It's never boring, and there are always new ways to broaden your perspective and try something different," she said. She recommends visitors wander the city's graffiti-lined laneways or explore speakeasy-style bars like Beneath Driver Lane and Miss Gunn's Basement Bar. Morrisey suggests lunch on Lygon Street, widely considered the birthplace of the city's cafe culture. "Eat slow, talk loud and take your time," he said. "That is the real Melbourne." Osaka The only Asian city to make the top 10 (ranked seventh overall), Osaka scored perfect marks in stability, healthcare and education. And while it's often overshadowed by flashier Tokyo, Osaka's under-the-radar vibe is exactly what residents love about living here. "Osaka is a very well-developed, very cool city," said long-time resident Graham Hill who runs the review website Osaka City. "It is to Japan what San Francisco might be to the United States: a smaller city, but with a unique flavour of its own." The city's reliable infrastructure – including a clean, punctual and wide-reaching transit system – make Osaka easy to live in, without the crowds of Tokyo. Hill says it's simpler to get reservations at top-tier places, and the prices are much better as well. Dominic Dijkstra, director of mixology at the newly opened Waldorf Astoria Osaka, agrees: "Whether it's a quick bowl of ramen after work or a beautifully crafted kaiseki dinner, you're never far from an amazing meal." Dijkstra learned his craft in Manchester, England, and says that Osaka has a similar kind and unpretentious vibe. "People are proud of their culture and are always ready to share it with you," he said. "Osaka has a warmth and humour in everyday life that makes it feel liveable beyond convenience. People chat to you in shops, joke with you at the bar and make the city feel like home." While Osaka has major tourist attractions like the historic Osaka Castle, Hill recommends visitors seek out everyday Osaka pleasures. "Hanging out at Streamer Coffee Company in Shinsaibashi is a first-class 'cool' urban experience to rival any city," he said. "Grabbing something to eat from Utsubo Bakery Panena and sitting down in Utsubo Park delivers some of the simple pleasures available to an Osaka local." Dijkstra recommends heading to Kyobashi train hub to find the city's true soul, noting that the string of tiny bars just outside the station is always full of friendly Osakans at any time of day. "Grab a beer or a highball and squeeze in next to the locals," he said. "You'll get an authentic glimpse into why this city is so special." -- For more Travel stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook, X and Instagram.


BBC News
11 hours ago
- BBC News
Why do islands around the world compete?
It's not obvious why islanders feel the urge to compete with each other. But they 20th Island Games being held in Orkney brings people together from the smaller isles around Britain and some distant seagirt lands, mostly with links to Britain or What have they got in common? The Island Games Federation offers an answer. "There's just something about islanders," its website declares."Growing up in small communities surrounded and shaped by the sea instils in us an independent spirit, a fierce pride in our culture and heritage — perhaps even a touch of stubbornness. "It's what gives Games competitors the will and determination to train hard, defy the odds and reach for gold". There's certainly truth to the argument that they share cultures long protected by the sea from outside influences. The word "insularity" - literally an island mindset - has been borrowed and distorted to describe a lack of interest in the world many island stories are defined by the numbers who leave, taking their collective voice to centres of power and often remitting their earnings and investments back common heritage also has to do with looking to the oceans for a living from seafood, seafaring and tourism. Among the Island Games competitors, they can also claim to be treated distantly by governments in London, Edinburgh and Copenhagen. The history of art department at St Andrews University is leading a project to hear such island stories across oceans, mainly linking Scottish islands with the year, it brought a group of young people from Barbados to the Isle of to Jamie Allan Brown, a St Andrews researcher, the focus was on passing down generations' "traditional ecological knowledge, especially about local plants and wildlife, language and place names, and living off the land and sea".The University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) has a master's degree course in island studies, in which you can learn about the intertwined social, cultural, economic and environmental issues that concern Scottish also draws comparisons with others in the Baltic, the Faroes and Canada's Atlantic coast. Around half of the independent members of the United Nations can be considered islands, including the UK and Ireland. Some are classified as small and developing and they form a block of 39 nations within the UN, mostly in the Caribbean, Pacific and Indian what do they have in common? It may seem easier to see the differences - tropical to polar, volcanic or sandy, sovereign or dependent, valued or neglected, rich or poor, and with often complex interactions between the indigenous and the there are growing reasons for islanders to get together to celebrate a common bond of island-ness, and to combine forces in common causes. Climate change The voice of micro-nations has never been heard as loud as it is when they get together at the COP summits. The forums gave prominence to national leaders from the Pacific and Caribbean, highlighting the risk islands face from rising sea levels and the increasing incidence of extreme a sovereign nation that rises out the Pacific Ocean to a height of only five metres, is expected to be mainly under water at high tide within only 25 years. Last month, for that reason, Australia began a ballot scheme to allow some of Tuvalu's citizens to apply for permanent visas. It was vastly over-subscribed as applications came in from more than a third of households. The UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) faces a challenge from the Marshall Islands (which has an average elevation of two metres) on Tuesday this week, calling on member countries to phase out the burning of oil. It brings the prospect of a split from the usual consensus-building of that forum by oil producers in the Persian Gulf, signalling a formal retreat from COP commitments. The USA, under President Donald Trump, has pulled out of the it's not just low-lying island nations that face a threat from climate change. Hurricanes can lay waste a successful island economy within a few days. In Hebridean islands, such as the Uists, storms can devastate sand dunes and machair, breach coastal defences and road links, and buckle wood-framed homes. James Ellsmoor is founder and chief executive of Island Innovation, a consultancy that helps islanders learn from each other. He says the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) goes to COP gatherings with a "collective moral authority, to say they're negligible as emitters, but on the front line as the most impacted". Renewable energy Island Innovation has 16 employees, working with clients around the world. It supports island authorities, often with limited resources to engage with multi-national organisations for funding or influence. Once a year there's a get-together, this autumn in Gran Ellsmoor completed the degree course in island studies at UHI while working in renewable energy in the Caribbean. He graduated at St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall and looks to UHI as a model for dispersed learning that could be important to many other island groups. He says Scotland is also setting an example that's being watched in Greece, South Korea and Italy for "island-proofing" he had grown up on the English-Welsh border, his interest in island economies was sparked by the higher cost of power when he went to work in the Caribbean. Power bills per unit can be up to five times higher than those in larger countries, usually due to the lack of scale when installing and running an oil-burning power station. That's changing, he points out. The harnessing of wind, solar and tidal energy can make islands self-sufficient in power, and the falling cost of long sub-sea cables should make it possible for more exporting of islanders know a lot about that, sharing a familiar tale around the world where islanders see wind turbines taking over their horizon but little of the benefit accruing to the island or Orcadians never tire of reminding us, they have the widest range of renewable power sources, including the EMEC marine technology testing centre, but still have higher power bills than other parts of Ellsmoor sees possibilities from island enterprises using their networks to build markets for island-specific answers to net zero questions. He cites the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island, often overlooked across Canada's vastness, but making waves with renewable and waste inventions that can be sold through strengthening links with Scottish and Canary islands as it builds up a portfolio of far-flung the issues they could consider together in future is the dependence on fossil fuels for shipping and air transport, which are vital links for people and goods coming and going out of islands. Orkney offers a pioneering approach to electric inter-island flight. Coming and going One trend that islands have long experienced is of depopulation, as younger people leave, pushed by poverty or pulled by opportunity elsewhere. Seen as an acute problem in the Western Isles of Scotland, those who remain on the islands tend to lack the range of age groups and skills to sustain public Korea is relatively new to this. Extended families on its islands are being broken up by out-migration and it is looking to other islands to learn lessons of supporting the economy and social structures around its has also been a dominant issue for Caribbean islands, bringing demographic problems back home, but also that large network of an island's supporters and investors. However aircraft and ships are not only taking people away. There are a lot of arrivals. The growing problem for many islands is also one of their biggest opportunities - the global growth of thrives on one of the most valuable but intangible resources available to islands - that they appear to offer a destination that gets-away-from-it-all, often with pristine beaches, stunning coastlines and dramatic story-lines, fascinating cultures with rich Shetland is becoming world-renowned for its TV murder mysteries, Orkney offers it all, and that history is opening up with new archaeological finds that show how important the islands were as a crossing point for sea trading routes long before roads were a reliable way of getting around. Aruba offers a lot too. In the southern Caribbean, around 90% of its economy is in tourism. When the pandemic hit, as an extreme example of such tropical islands within easy reach of North American and European markets, the vulnerability of the economy was laid bare. Over-tourism concerns Post-pandemic, tourism has bounced back. Majorca this year expects 100m tourism arrivals. And it no longer takes a big marketing budget these days to promote how special a beach or coastal view can be. Instagram does that for free. The result can be seen on an island such as Skye, where tourism is tipping into concerns about over-tourism, driving some permanent residents to depart. The solitude and pristine environment people want to experience is undermined by having to share it with so many others, also using narrow roads, also in camper along with other short term letting agencies, offers islanders the means to turn any old shed into a bijou and romantic escape. Those used to be the places where young adult islanders would find homes while awaiting something more permanent and where seasonal workers stayed and sustained the summer tourist season. Not any more.A common theme running through island economies is the lack of housing, though it depends on land ownership patterns and on affordability where incomes can be very Spain's Balearic and Canary Islands, the effects of over-tourism, and particularly on housing costs, have become a hot political topic, with protest movements threatening to scare off the tourists on whom islanders continue to depend. One answer is to get tourists to pay for the true economic cost of their visit, through charges and taxes. Scotland's councils are currently sizing up the cases for and against tourist taxes and charges for visiting cruise James Ellsmoor points out, the international tourism businesses which own resorts and cruise liners are also powerful lobbyists against taxes and charges. In the Caribbean, the threat of carving more government income out of tourism is met with a threat to take business to neighbouring islands. Similar arguments are being made in Scotland. New World Order One of the gains of the post-1945 order is that tiny islands could assert their independence and sovereignty, including many breaking colonial that world order lasted, they had rights in international law and a champion in the United Nations. In the era symbolised by Donald Trump, there's a new world order, in which large superpowers are more interested in carving up spheres of influence and setting legal questions to one side in favour of their national makes small islands vulnerable to the interests and whims of those superpowers. A hundred years after the Treaty of Svalbard handed control of these Arctic islands to Norway, the prospect of mineral extraction in the region is a source of tensions with claim on Taiwan is the big threat to peace in East Asia, and small Pacific states such as Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu have been drawn into China's web of debt finance influence. The US President says he wants to take over Greenland. If that is even possible, it would be easy to do the same with smaller states in strategically helpful law can still protect islanders in some cases. It was because Mauritus had won its legal claim over the Chagos islands in the Indian Ocean that the UK government felt it could not avoid a deal to relinquish ownership while still providing access to US forces on the strategically significant air base at Diego continues to be a big player in shaping the role of the world's islands - former colonies and continuing dependent territories - because it used to be exceptionally effective at taking over islands when its Royal Navy ruled the some islands, the threat from larger countries, including the UK, is to crack down on tax evasion through low-tax havens, which happen to be island territories including the Isle of Man, Channel Islands and the Virgin and Cayman islands around Scotland do not offer such tax benefits. But after the sports competition is over in Orkney this week, they can offer further economic, environmental and social co-operation across the waters that define them.


Telegraph
11 hours ago
- Telegraph
Eight problems America must fix to win back British tourists
It's official: British travellers have fallen out of love with America. How else can you explain the US's profound decline in our Telegraph Travel Awards, which has seen the Land of the Free go from being voted readers' tenth favourite destination just over a decade ago to a lowly 50th place in this year's rankings? To be clear, it isn't that British holidaymakers aren't heading Stateside: polling indicates that the US remains the most popular long-haul destination. But when it comes to satisfaction, our readers are now ranking the destination below the likes of Vietnam, Oman, Argentina and Colombia, as well as big-hitters such as Japan and Greece. As someone who has ventured to 20 states over ten years, I would be the first to sing the country's praises as a truly life-changing destination. But being a regular has given me some insight into those little niggles that can take some of the shine off an otherwise stellar vacation. ESTA grumbles Entering the US on a British passport is meant to be easy thanks to the ESTA visa waiver, which allows you to do the necessary admin well in advance. In practice, though, regular visitors have been dealing with a steady build-up of friction over the past decade. One thing that stands out is the first Trump administration's decision to add Cuba to the list of countries that can render you ESTA-ineligible. This hangover from the Cold War now means that the 30,000 or so Britons who visit Cuba each year will need to apply for a full visa should they want to visit the States. At the same time, the heightened focus on immigration controls means that even the most benign, low-risk travellers can't be sure they won't face a barrage of questions when they reach the border. Show some common sense and call them 'sir' or 'ma'am' and you should be absolutely fine. Chaotic airports Home to four of the world's busiest airports, the US has never been a picnic when it comes to air travel. But TSA data reveals that things have been getting worse in recent years, with average waiting times at tourist hubs like JFK and Orlando International moving in the wrong direction. That's before we get to the shockingly outdated condition of some major US airports, like Miami International and Chicago O'Hare. Once you've visited the pristine, technologically-advanced alternatives in places like Abu Dhabi and Qatar, their American counterparts can look seriously shabby in comparison. Expensive transport The vastness of America – its cities included – means that it's often impossible to do anything on foot. And with public transport absent beyond most of the major cities, travellers generally depend on rental cars and taxi apps to get around. Unfortunately for them, the price of both of those options has skyrocketed in recent years, with car rentals jumping some 40 per cent since the pandemic. As for Uber, I only have to check my previous email receipts to see how expensive things have got over the past decade. The same journey can easily cost more than double. Crowded attractions With its vast landscapes and massive highways, you don't imagine the US could get crowded. But a wave of pent-up demand from the pandemic coupled with a surge of rich retirees looking to complete their travel bucket lists has triggered a massive domestic tourism boom, pushing some destinations to their limits. Traffic queues at popular national parks like Yosemite have been reported to be exceeding two hours, with some 332 million people descending on a US national park last year. Meanwhile social media continues to drive legions of impressionable millennials to viral destinations. In sleepy New England, picturesque towns have resorted to road closures and extra sheriff patrols to deal with the hordes of phone-wielding out-of-towners seeking the perfect autumnal shot. Unsafe cities While the extent of America's urban crime wave is hotly contested, there's no denying that the mega-cities of New York and San Francisco at least feel less safe than they used to. Dishevelled drug users on street corners may be a sad sign of underlying social problems, but they certainly make you think twice about parking your rental car. Then there are the scammers. On my last visit to NYC, I noticed that JFK has tannoy announcements warning about unlicensed taxi drivers demanding extortionate fares with the threat of menace. Be careful: the one I spotted outside the terminal touting his wares looked like an extra from The Sopranos. Pricey restaurants Higher food costs and a hot economy has seen restaurant prices rocket across the States. The US government's Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that menu prices are 27 per cent higher than before the pandemic, while that most American of culinary institutions, McDonald's, estimates that its franchises are charging 40 per cent more than five years ago. Add to that the perennial bugbear of British visitors: tipping. These days, those ubiquitous 'Square' payment terminals will even suggest amounts (usually starting at 20 per cent and rising up towards 50 per cent) when you pay, giving each one a Tripadvisor-style verdict – 'Great service!' – to help you decide. Costly hotels (with hidden fees) It isn't just restaurants that have caught the inflation bug: hotel costs have boomed too. By some estimates, hotel prices in Las Vegas have jumped 47 per cent in five years, while decent rooms in the touristy parts of New York City now top $400 a night during peak periods. If the prices weren't bad enough, the ongoing trend for hidden fees (usually known as 'resort fees') shows no sign of abating. Hotels in the Big Apple now routinely charge a 'destination fee,' which can easily add an extra $30 – per night – to your bill. In the spiritual home of the resort fee, Las Vegas, the average levy has hit $40 per night, up from $36 just one year ago. Stronger dollar We know that Britons are more likely to flock to the US when the exchange rate is in their favour. Shopping addicts may remember the craze for Florida trips just before the financial crash, when one pound bought just over two dollars. These days, things have moved strongly in the other direction, with sterling finding a new home at around $1.30 for much of the past few years. While your British accent and manners might go far in America, your wallet probably won't.