Tuesday, April 5, 2011

ESTC 2011

I would kill to attend this, but alas, this year I will be 8 months pregnant and flying will not be an option:

Ecotourism and Sustainable Tourism Conference (ESTC 2011)

Hosted by Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, USA, the ESTC 2011 will be held from September 19th-21st, 2011. Bringing together 500+ business leaders, industry professionals and community stakeholders, the ESTC 2011 will feature dynamic sessions, public forums and social functions that offer eye-opening insights into the latest on sustainable business strategies and unparalleled networking and knowledge-sharing experiences.

http://www.ecotourismconference.org/

Update on Japan

Dear friends of GLOBIS & KIBOW,

This is my 4th email to you after March 11th. The reasons why I am sending emails to you are simple. I feel that foreign media are not doing their jobs and I guessed that you would love to hear what an entrepreneur living in Tokyo is thinking about.

One Canadian student who has flown from Toronto on March 13th to Tokyo to join GLOBIS International MBA Program (our academic year starts from April) said to me, “CNN and Fox are disgusting; I thought BBC was fair, but this time even BBC is over exaggerating”.

One female Malaysian student who has flown into Tokyo just two days ago said “If you are in KL, you think that all of Tokyo is contaminated by radiation. My parents strongly begged me not to come to Tokyo. After arriving here, everything is amazingly normal.”

This is the typical reaction you get when you talk to people in Tokyo now.
In this 4th issue, I would like to draw your attention to just 3 points.

1. Fukushima Nuclear Reactor seems to be stabilizing:

Hong Kong Radiation Exceeds Tokyo Even After Nuclear Crisis -Businessweek

http://buswk.co/gSUS9P

If you live in Tokyo, the radiation you get in the air is minimal. The level of the air and water is decreasing and most of us are back in business as usual. My wife who has to take care of 5 kids does not mind drinking tap water now.

2. You get all the attention just being in Japan now!

If you come to Tokyo now, you will get all the attention. After the exodus of foreigners, Roppongi is quite a different place and hotels are filled just with local residence. Shangri-la Hotel has decided to close down for one month. We would just have to question their level of commitment to Japan.

At the last email that I had sent to you, I have criticized French
Government for having caused panic in Tokyo by sending chartered flight to evacuate French people out of Japan, but recently French is showing strong sing of coming back. President Sarkozy and CEO of French nuke firm Areva has visited Japan, and vowed to support Japan.

Saudi Aramco has grabbed the headline by CEO Al-Falih visiting Japan on
March 22nd when no foreigner even thought about touching Japan, and offered
a $20 million donation to help Japanese recovery efforts.

Carlos Ghosn, Chairman and CEO of Renault- Nissan Alliance, visited a Nissan factory in Iwaki, which is within 40 KM radius from Fukushima Nuclear Reactor on March 31st has gained the support of people in Iwaki by showing his commitment to Fukushima and Japan. GE chief executive Jeff Immelt is now in Japan.

You will get all the attention just by visiting Japan now. On the other hand, if you do not show your commitment, you will just simply be disregarded after Japan recovers.

I am still shocked with Lufthansa who stops in Seoul-Incheon to allow for crew changes. “That way the crews no longer have to stay in Japan overnight”. What a bad message that Lufthansa is sending to Japan. Japanese people are so frustrated with this policy that some of my friends told me that they would never fly Lufthansa. After all, we have not heard strong messages from German, yet.

3. Going back to business as usual

Most of the houses in Japan except for the region that was hit by Tsunami have regained electricity, water and gas. The roads have been fixed and trains have gradually started running. The speed of the recovery of factories is acclaimed by an Israeli friend of mine as “amazing”.

As for me, GLOBIS has just finished Entrance Ceremony for newly entering students of International MBA program today. We have 12 different nationalities, such as French, Canadian, Thailand, Chinese, Korean, Nigerian, Danish, etc. All together, the number of students who entered GLOBIS MBA in both Japanese and English languages is 348, which makes us as the largest business school in Japan with best ranked by Nikkei Career Magazine for 2 consecutive years.

I have attached a speech memo that I have used today. Japanese are working hard to go back to business as usual, but we still have three issues hanging in front of us.

1)Perceived danger & uncertainties on Fukushima

2)Power shortages caused by the shutdown of most of nuclear reactors in Greater Tokyo Metropolitan Area.

3)Supply chain problems: The tsunami has washed out some of the critical factories in Touhoku region, and Radiation is forcing some factories operating within 20‾30km radius from Fukushima to cease operation.

However, cherry blossoms have started to bloom, so the mindset of Japanese people is becoming much more positive now. Furthermore, I can feel that there is strong energy coming out from within us. We can say that Japanese people are truly committed not only to rebuild Japan, but to create and innovate something new after this disaster.

So hopefully, you can spread words that Japan is coming back.

Yours,

GLOBIS & KIBOW Leader
Yoshi Hori

Facebook:YoshitoHori
http://twitter.com/YoshitoHori
http://blog.globis.co.jp/hori_english/

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Trains Make the World Go Round

As a pretty seasoned traveller I have spend my fare share of time on trains. I have taken the rails in Canada, Scotland, England, Holland, Germany, Czech Rep. and Thailand.

Most of the time the stations have been clean, but unremarkable. All have the same standard fare; food stalls, notice boards, ticket counters and hords or people going here and there.

But clearly I have been missing out! Just take a look at some of these babies:

11 of the World’s Coolest Train Stations

I have been thinking that my next adventure would bring me back to Britain and Europe and this seals the deal. I foresee a fare bit more train travel in my future now ...

10 Constants of Air Travel

If you have EVER flown you have encountered at least one of these.

If you have yet to take on the open skies, well, you will ...

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

The Lone Traveller

When I was in South East Asia for 3 months last year I was essentially alone. Sure I met people every time I turned around and ended up sharing rooms, boats and buses with familiar strangers, but at the end of the day I was on my own.

I had wanted to take off and explore the world by myself, with my own agenda and plans.

And while I am one of the seemingly rare folks who enjoyes her own company and has no problems being alone with my thoughts and a good book, some people thought I was nuts to go at it on my own. They all expressed various reason, mostly them being safety related, but some were worried about me getting lonely or depressed.

With all honesty I can say that I was never lonely or depressed. Sure I pined for home a few days here and there & missed my boyfriend. Sure long night bus rides through the Vietnamese countryside can be a bit trying solo, but the experiences changed me.


Enroute to the Mui Ne

My time travelling solo made me stronger, more sure of myself, gave me the courage to step out of my confort zone and take on the unknown. It made me a better woman in all sorts of ways.


Enjoying my 2 day boat journey up the Mekong River from Laos back to Thailand

But thats just me.  Some people just cant even fathom the idea of travelling alone. And for some who do take it on, it may not end up being the experience that they had hoped for.


Cycling around the Mekong Delta

BootsnAll has posted another great article on Dealing With Loneliness As a Solo Traveler, how solo travel can change you.

I encourage EVERYONE at some point to get out and do it on your own, even if its just a short road trip. You may just surprise yourself :)