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Untitled Document
Accessible tourism is big money

At a conference held last week by the European Network for Accessible Tourism (ENAT), over 200 representatives from international disability organisations, tourist boards and private enterprise came to the overwhelming conclusion that accessible tourism is the fastest-growing business opportunity in the tourism industry.

Delegates heard that, according to figures from the European Disability Forum, there are around 50 million people with a disability in Europe. Take into account the fast-growing population over 65 and the fact that people with disabilities rarely travel alone and the market nearly trebles.

A recent study by the University of Surrey estimates that 127 million people, or 27% of the EU population, would benefit from accessible tourism, and that this niche industry has an estimated value of 80 billion euros per year.

That figure doesn't include pregnant women, families with young children and - vitally - travellers from the US, Australia and the rest of the world.

Not a small niche, says ENAT's co-ordinator Ivor Ambrose, summing up the conference mood: "Accessible tourism is big money and the market is growing fast. Partly because we're all getting older. The tourism industry is realising that open access benefits all customers - it's a competitive advantage, not just a social or legal responsibility."

The three-day conference was organised by ENAT's Spanish partner Fundacion ONCE and held in Valencia, Spain. Simultaneous Spanish-English translation, sign language and subtitles allowed 200 members from 22 countries to participate, many of them with a wide range of disabilities themselves.

More information and conference presentations can be found on the ENAT website, www.accessibletourism.org.
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