As travellers increasingly seek out landscapes and species thought to be vanishing under rising seas, warming oceans and melting ice, researchers warn that last-chance or “see-it-before-it’s-gone” tourism can both raise awareness and accelerate destruction if poorly managed. New scholarship frames the trend as a distinct policy challenge — dubbed eco-necrotourism — that forces park managers, tour operators and governments to contend with visitors’ grief, grief-driven demand, and the legal and practical limits of access. The debate matters for Thailand because coral reefs, mangroves and other coastal attractions already under stress draw millions of domestic and international visitors whose choices will shape local livelihoods and the country’s nature-based tourism future (An ethical guide to last-chance tourism).
Last-chance tourism has surged as visible climate impacts invite travellers to witness dramatic loss. Visitors flock to shrinking glaciers, thinning sea ice and bleaching reefs to experience and memorialise what may not exist for future generations. Researchers who study park management say the phenomenon is not merely an emotional reaction; it creates new practical problems for conservation planning and visitor regulation. One recent, widely cited legal analysis argues that managers must incorporate human psychological responses — including ecological grief — into adaptation strategies to avoid “millions of people trampling over an already fragile landscape” and to prepare for what the authors call the “last visitor” problem (Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management).
Academic and journalistic reporting shows two opposing pathways. On the harmful side, growth in travel to fragile places increases local wear, pollution and carbon emissions from long-distance flights and cruise ships — pressures that can compound the very threats tourists came to witness. Examples include overcrowding and infrastructure strain at glacier viewing sites, the spread of invasive organisms and disease in polar regions, and anchor damage and crowding on coral reefs around the world (Climate Change Is Making ‘Last Chance Tourism’ More Popular, and Riskier; An ethical guide to last-chance tourism). On the beneficial side, guided, educational visits can create emotional bonds that motivate conservation funding, citizen science and political pressure for protective measures. Experienced guides and responsible operators report that visitors often become better informed and more supportive of protection after direct exposure to threatened ecosystems (An ethical guide to last-chance tourism).
Key facts from recent reporting and research make the trade-offs clear. Studies of glacier visitors in Europe found that roughly half were motivated by a desire to see ice before it disappeared, a driver that helps explain rising glacier tourism in places like Iceland — where some operators estimate hundreds of thousands of visitors now take glacier trips annually (Visitors’ motivations to engage in glacier tourism in the European Alps; Climate Change Is Making ‘Last Chance Tourism’ More Popular, and Riskier). Researchers and park managers warn that receding ice makes routes more dangerous, increases rockfall and cave collapse risk, and requires new safety and access rules (Climate Change Is Making ‘Last Chance Tourism’ More Popular, and Riskier).
Polar tourism offers a model for stricter governance: the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO) sets landing limits, wildlife-disturbance rules and biosecurity protocols, and many Antarctic operators embed citizen science and education into journeys to reduce impacts and raise conservation awareness (IAATO: During Your Visit). Researchers who study eco-necrotourism recommend three questions every traveller should ask: am I travelling in an eco-friendly way, will my activities damage the landscape, and what conservation actions will I take on return? Those simple filters aim to turn grief and wonder into lasting stewardship rather than a single, consumptive viewing (Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management; An ethical guide to last-chance tourism).
Experts and frontline guides stress that framing matters. A veteran polar guide argues that education and small-group itineraries help reduce local harm while increasing visitors’ willingness to support science and protection. A reef guide noted that seeing a damaged coral system can catalyse concern for reefs more broadly, prompting donations, volunteer reef restoration or political support for marine protection (An ethical guide to last-chance tourism). Robin Kundis Craig, who coined and developed the legal treatment of eco-necrotourism, warns that managers must prepare for visitors’ shifting emotions — from awe to grief — and the policy choices such feelings can precipitate (Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management).
What does this mean for Thailand? The country sits at the intersection of nature-based tourism and climate vulnerability. Thailand’s marine ecosystems — long a major draw for both Thai and international travellers — suffered significant coral bleaching events in 2024 and 2025. Government and regional reports documented bleaching across many marine national parks in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea, prompting emergency responses and reef-restoration efforts by marine agencies and civil society (Coral Bleaching Detected in 19 National Parks Along Thai Gulf and Andaman Sea Coasts; Draft ICRI Member’s Report - Thailand). An international coral monitoring summary found bleaching-level heat stress affected the vast majority of reefs globally during a recent intense event — underscoring that Thailand’s reefs are part of a global pattern and not isolated incidents (ICRI forum summary).
Tourism in Thailand is highly localised around coastal provinces and island communities. Many dive operators, homestays and small businesses depend on healthy reefs and predictable seasons. When reefs bleach and reef-based tourism drops, the economic shock hits coastal families directly. At the same time, last-chance visitors — foreign and domestic travellers rushing to see reefs perceived as threatened — can overwhelm local carrying capacity. Large numbers of boat landings, inexperienced snorkellers stepping on coral, and poorly moored vessels have been identified in local reporting as contributors to reef damage (Coral Bleaching Hits 21 Marine Parks in Thailand).
Thailand faces a twofold challenge that mirrors the global dilemma. First, reduce demand-side emissions and long-haul travel impacts where feasible. Second, improve local site management so that visitors who come to witness change can be converted into protective partners rather than additional stressors. Thailand’s Department of Marine and Coastal Resources and protected-area agencies have tools at hand: enforceable visitor limits, mandatory environmental briefings, stricter mooring rules, and incentivised participation in reef restoration and citizen science. Case studies from other regions show that these approaches can reduce immediate harm while converting tourism revenue into on-the-ground conservation (IAATO guidelines; Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management).
Thai cultural values provide a pathway for ethical travel messaging. Cultural emphasis on communal duty, respect for elders and Buddhist-inspired stewardship can be marshalled to frame conservation as a moral obligation to future generations. Tourism campaigns that link a family’s duty to preserve natural heritage for grandchildren, or that invite local monks and village elders to endorse sustainable visitation, may resonate more strongly than abstract carbon arguments. Practical, culturally attuned messaging can encourage travellers to adopt pre-trip carbon-offsetting where appropriate, to choose operators with low-impact practices, and to refuse activities that cause direct habitat damage.
Historically, Thailand’s tourism boom has transformed rural livelihoods and infrastructure. From overflowing beaches in the 2010s to pandemic-era stoppages and a rapid rebound, the sector has repeatedly tested the country’s ability to regulate flows. Echoes of Venice’s overtourism debates and Antarctic biosecurity concerns point to how quickly popular sites can reach ecological tipping points. The current moment — when reefs bleach, mangroves retreat and shorelines change — is a reminder that adaptation requires both top-down policy and bottom-up behaviour change. Without both, the “last-chance” framing risks turning emotional urgency into a consumption-driven farewell tour.
Looking ahead, Thailand can pursue coordinated policies that translate research insights into practical steps. Managers should map “last-chance” hotspots where scientific indicators of rapid decline coincide with rising visitor demand, and impose time-limited access controls or seasonal closures in those areas. Integrating emotional response planning into park manager training — as eco-necrotourism scholars recommend — can help staff channel visitor grief into volunteerism, donations, or political advocacy for protective measures (Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management). Tour operators should be required to present clear pre-trip briefings on ecological sensitivity and be certified for low-impact practice; incentives such as preferential berth allocations and marketing support can reward those who invest in sustainability. For long-haul visitors, national tourism boards can promote multi-destination itineraries that reduce per-site pressure and highlight off-peak or less-vulnerable attractions.
Concrete actions for Thai travellers and operators are straightforward and practical. Choose operators that demonstrate best practice (small groups, secure moorings, education programs, and contribution to local conservation funds). Avoid activities that directly damage habitat (stepping on corals, anchoring on reefs, feeding wildlife). Participate in supervised citizen science or reef-restoration activities when offered. Share learnings with home communities to multiply conservation awareness. Locally, tourism businesses can reinvest a percentage of ticket revenue into site rehabilitation and community resilience programs. National policymakers should mandate monitoring of visitor numbers and environmental indicators, and link permits to measurable conservation outcomes.
The recent research and reporting on last-chance tourism offer both a warning and an opportunity. Left unchecked, grief-driven visitations can worsen the loss they seek to memorialise. Managed well, the same emotional connection can be the seed of long-term protection, funding and political will. For Thailand, where coastal ecosystems support livelihoods and cultural identity, the choice is not academic: it will determine whether future generations inherit reefs and shorelines preserved by collective action — or only photographs and regret. Policymakers, operators and travellers must treat visits to fragile places as responsibilities, not consumptive trophies, and use the current moment of attention to build durable protections that reflect Thai values of care for family, community and the natural world.
(An ethical guide to last-chance tourism (An ethical guide to last-chance tourism).) (Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management: Last Chance Tourism, Ecological Grief, and the World’s Disappearing Natural Wonders (Eco-Necrotourism and Public Land Management).) (Climate Change Is Making ‘Last Chance Tourism’ More Popular, and Riskier (Climate Change Is Making ‘Last Chance Tourism’ More Popular, and Riskier).) (IAATO: During Your Visit (IAATO: During Your Visit).) (Coral Bleaching Detected in 19 National Parks Along Thai Gulf and Andaman Sea Coasts (Coral Bleaching Detected in 19 National Parks Along Thai Gulf and Andaman Sea Coasts).) (ICRI member report on Thailand (Draft ICRI Member’s Report - Thailand).)