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Nature and animals, colleagues to a passion for technology. In 2008, 10,000 people visited Russia's federal reserves, protected areas and national parks, 's total tourist flow. Officials are very focused on ecotourism and expect numbers to increase in 2019. But as the numbers grow, so does the pile of trash left by irresponsible tourists. What's the problem? Nature reserves around the world are getting clogged. U.S. national parks generate tons of household waste each year.
This volume is enough to fill the Statue of Liberty more than 100 times. The UK has seen an moible number data unprecedented rise in fly camping, with campers leaving their tents, equipment and rubbish in the woods after relaxing in the woods and returning home. The Russian Ministry of Natural Resources reported that in 2010, hectares of unauthorized dumping of garbage weighing more than tons. For comparison, that's the weight of six Titanic ships.

People travel to increasingly remote regions for new experiences, exotic landscapes and beautiful photos: from the Arctic to the Far East. But even in hard-to-reach places, there are bottles and packages, wastelands left by new paths and wheels, soap stains in once-clean springs and lakes. Frightened animals leave their usual habitat. This upsets the already fragile balance of wild ecosystems. Perhaps the loudest discussion today is about the ecological state of Lake Baikal. Every year, the area along the lake receives more than 10,000 tourists. In 2010, the procuratorate found that there were violations in the tourist facilities here.
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