Booming tourism in southwest China's Tibet autonomous region is putting the preservation of its centuries-old heritage sites under unprecedented threat, according to experts.
The local tourism administration is expecting a record 10 million visitors to Tibet this year, a "real challenge" for Tenzin Namgyal, deputy chief of Tibet's cultural heritage administration.
"The boom will certainly bring wealth, but it will put the safety of Tibet's heritage sites to the test," he said on Thursday, in an interview with Xinhua ahead of the start of the tourist season in May.
Tibet has 4,277 major cultural heritage sites, mostly monasteries. "These are often centuries-old mud and wood structures that are extremely vulnerable and need immediate protection," according to the Tibet tourism head.
Particularly since the 2006 opening of a railway to Tibet, visitors have flocked to these monasteries, putting unprecedented pressure on the already ramshackle structures.
"Some monasteries suffer groundwork subsidence, some have deformed walls and many of the precious frescos are damaged by temperature and humidity changes and excessive exposure to flashlights," said Tenzin Namgyal.
He believes the situation could deteriorate as the number of visitors continues to rise.
Tibet has reported an average 30 percent increase in the number of visitors annually in recent years, said Tsewang Tashi, vice president of the regional federation of industry and commerce.
In 2011, nearly 8.7 million trips were made by visitors from home and abroad to Tibet.
Meanwhile, the plateau region is planning to draw 15 million visitors annually by 2015.
"Tibet is facing a dilemma: tourism authorities want more visitors and higher revenue, while we, as heritage guardians, want fewer tourists to keep the sites safer," noted Tenzin Namgyal.
The regional government, he said, has worked hard to settle on compromises that meet the demands of both sides.
One significant move was to encourage avid visitors to travel during the slack seasons of fall and winter. Last year, Tibet's tourism authorities and companies offered special winter tourism packages including discounted hotel rates and reduced-price tickets to major tourist destinations.
Meanwhile, authorities also stepped up market regulation at major destinations including the Potala Palace in the heart of Lhasa. In the busy seasons, police join market regulators to crack down on ticket scalpers, some of whom make 1,000 yuan (158.5 U.S. dollars) in illegal profits for a hard-won ticket to the Potala Palace.
The palace, the essence of ancient Tibetan architectural art, was first built by Tibetan King Songtsa Gambo in the 7th century, and was expanded during the 17th century by the Dalai Lama. It was inscribed on the UNESCO's list of world cultural heritage sites in 1994.
This year, the palace will receive an estimated 1.3 million visitors, up from last year's 1.16 million, said Khyungda, an official with the Potala Palace administration.
In the busy season from May to October, the administration places a daily limit of 4,000 on visitor numbers for safety reasons.
This year, it installed a 4-million-yuan monitoring system for closer surveillance of the structure and visitor flows. "We'll work out a more scientific upper limit of daily visitors load based on the surveillance data," said Khyungda.
China's central government has invested heavily in preserving heritage sites in Tibet. In the five years from 2011 to 2015, it will spend an estimated 1.7 billion yuan on preserving Tibet's cultural heritage, at least 300 million yuan more than the last three decades' total.