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Michelin Green Guide removes all tourist activities using animals

Travel guide is only promoting responsible tourism

michelin green guide camel

The Michelin Green Guide, one of the world's most influential travel and sightseeing guides, is removing all tourist activities that use animals.

As the Michelin Green Guide turns 100 years old, it has confirmed to PETA US and PETA France that it has made the historic change to no longer feature tourist activities using animals.


The Michelin Green Guide is designed for travellers and focuses on must-see sights, attractions and activities at destinations across the world.

camel in wild

"We are convinced of the need to present content promoting responsible tourism, which includes animal welfare," Michelin Éditions, the publishing arm of Michelin, said in a statement.

"Therefore, activities that can cause mistreatment... have been removed from our guides."

Michelin previously won a PETA France award for removing attractions with captive dolphins from its guides.

Now, tourist experiences such as elephant and camel rides will no longer be featured in the Michelin Green Guide.

'Tourism industry must evolve'

Via a PETA statement, camels are free to roam in nature, living in herds and communicating with each other through sounds and body movements.

As a sign of friendship, the animals will sometimes blow on each other's faces.

In the tourism industry, however, they carry heavy loads all day and go without appropriate shade or food. They are often dumped or sent to slaughter when they are too old, sick or injured to make money.

In 2019, 2023, and 2024, PETA Asia investigators went to the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt and saw workers whipping exhausted horses and camels forced to haul tourists in the scorching sun.

peta asia camel

In addition to the Michelin Green Guide's removal of tourist activities that use animals, the new edition of the Green Guide Spain will include a clear warning that bullfighting is "an abusive and declining tradition".

“Camel rides and bullfights are spectacles of suffering, and the Michelin Green Guide is right to leave these cruel and archaic activities in the history books," said PETA president Tracy Reiman.

"PETA is celebrating Michelin for showing the tourism industry how even a century-old institution can, and must, evolve to reflect today’s understanding that animals are individuals who feel pain and fear."

Images courtesy of PETA