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The New Threat Matrix for the Future of Travel

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Pandemic Lessons Learned to Celebrate National Travel and Tourism Week

Travel protection is no longer an option; local getaway gems are rediscovered. Lebanon, N.H. April 29, 2022 – Obtaining travel protection and using local getaways are the two biggest lessons learned since the pandemic started,…

Travel protection is no longer an option; local getaway gems are rediscovered.

Lebanon, N.H. April 29, 2022 – Obtaining travel protection and using local getaways are the two biggest lessons learned since the pandemic started, according to travel risk expert Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue. National Travel and Tourism Week (May 1-7) celebrates the value of travel, especially in a year when the U.S and the rest of the world are emerging from the worst of the pandemic that virtually shut down international travel.

The first important lesson learned is the need for travel protection beyond lost luggage or delayed flights. The pandemic raised awareness of the limitations of traditional travel insurance and the value of stand-alone medical assistance and evacuation safety net.

“The traveler mindset has made a tectonic shift, moving travel protection for emergency medical services and evacuation from ‘optional’ to ‘obligatory’. Travelers learned that emergency rescue and evacuation services are often essential, whether it’s due to COVID-19, a natural disaster, civil unrest or simply needing emergency help when you’re traveling,” Richards said.

The second important lesson realized is the beauty of local travel.

“COVID-19 opened the door for people to explore and appreciate the great outdoors nearby, and people flooded through the doorway,” Richards said. 

Outdoor activity worldwide is reaching unprecedented heights of curiosity and participation among beginners, experts and everyone in between.

“Whether or not destination travel is disrupted in the future, travelers learned to take advantage of local, outdoor activities. We learned, too. That’s why we eliminated our 100+ miles-from-home requirement to access our rescue services,” Richards said.

Global Rescue is the first and only travel risk and crisis management company to make this change. Now whether you’re near home or abroad and you get ill or injured and you’re unable to get to safety on your own, Global Rescue members are protected. 

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

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The New Threat Matrix for the Future of Travel

Will security technology minimize global threats?Are environmental policies a key to protecting destinations at risk? Lebanon, N.H. April 28, 2022 – The next decade of travel will face new and familiar threats, but security advances…

Will security technology minimize global threats?
Are environmental policies a key to protecting destinations at risk?

Lebanon, N.H. April 28, 2022 – The next decade of travel will face new and familiar threats, but security advances may stem global impacts if leaders act together worldwide, according to travel risk expert Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue. National Travel and Tourism Week (May 1-7) is an important time to commit brainpower and resources to recognize probable threats and moderate their impact as the travel industry recovers from the worst of a pandemic.

The biggest threats to the future of travel in the next decade include things like war, pandemics, terrorism and natural disaster.

“Some leaders might think the COVID-19 pandemic is over and there’s no need to spend money to protect against a potential pandemic, but infectious disease outbreaks remain an existential threat in the future,” Richards said. Health security measures deployed in transportation hubs like airports and railway terminals are essential. “Adding pathogen scanners to the current array of metal detectors, backscatter x-ray machines, millimeter-wave scanners, and cabinet x-ray machines must be a top priority,” Richards said.

Technology exists today to identify pathogens that spread through the air. “We can use technology in transportation hubs to identify infectious disease outbreaks and take immediate action. That technology can be deployed in a way so the protocols don’t increase friction in travel,” he added.

Richards expects an increasing number of environmental restoration policies to surface that will improve access to key biodiversity areas in a sustainable way. “Implementing effective conservation refurbishment programs will take time, money and effort,” he said.

The rising cost of fuel, lodging and travel are silent threats that could make travel to some destinations unaffordable for many.

“These are all potential threats that could be mitigated if we put our minds and our resources into it,” he said.

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

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Are Virtual Reality, Outer Space and Undersea Trips the Future of Travel?

Advancing technology brings travelers closer to inner, outer space and mixed reality. Lebanon, N.H. April 27, 2022 – The future of travel will include distinct destinations, including space travel, undersea expeditions and virtual reality trips,…

Advancing technology brings travelers closer to inner, outer space and mixed reality.

Lebanon, N.H. April 27, 2022 – The future of travel will include distinct destinations, including space travel, undersea expeditions and virtual reality trips, according to travel risk expert Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue. National Travel and Tourism Week (May 1-7) commemorates travel history and projects the future of travel – more important than ever as travelers worldwide emerge from the worst of a pandemic that effectively eliminated travel abroad.

Virtual reality, augmented reality and mixed reality are opportunities that could supplement physical travel.

“The argument goes that the material world may lose its allure as virtual reality technology advances. In the movie, The Matrix, reality is defined simply as electrical signals interpreted by your brain. I disagree. Virtual reality and its derivatives are ‘pseudo travel’ and, ultimately, we’re going to want to go see the places we’ve visited virtually. Humans are born to travel, explore and experience and no computer-generated experience will ever replace it,” Richards said.

There are fewer places to explore on Earth’s surface.

“Undersea and the cosmos are the next long-term destination priorities,” Richards said.

Based on advances in technology, it appears the human race is destined to explore inner and outer space. The International Space Station and Biosphere 2 Ocean are programs designed to explore and understand those environments. Space tourism is already available, although at present a 90-minute tour costs nearly half a million dollars per person for a few minutes of weightlessness.

“It’s only a matter of time before opportunity increases, excursions mature, and costs decrease for space travel. The tide of undersea tourism is rising, too,” Richards said.

The world’s first underwater hotel opened in 2018, the world’s largest underwater restaurant cut the ribbon a year later, and underwater art galleries are spreading like Ngaro Underwater Sculpture Trail in Australia’s Whitsunday Islands – each brings marine tourism to greater depths.

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

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Titan Business Awards Names Global Rescue Gold Winner for Local Field Rescue

Lebanon, NH – April 26, 2022 – Titan Business Awards, a New York City-based program recognizing innovative business excellence, named Global Rescue winner of the 2022 Titan Gold Award for “Local Field Rescue Service” in the…

Lebanon, NH – April 26, 2022 – Titan Business Awards, a New York City-based program recognizing innovative business excellence, named Global Rescue winner of the 2022 Titan Gold Award for “Local Field Rescue Service” in the Travel Product and Services category.

“The award honors the far-reaching efforts of entrepreneurs and organizations around the world, whose contributions are far beyond the norm, and proudly celebrates your arrival on the global stage of innovation and ingenuity,” said Thomas Brandt, Titan Awards spokesperson. More than 800 award nominees were submitted from nearly 50 countries including, the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Netherlands, and Canada.

Global Rescue announced Local Field Rescue emergency services in response to the pandemic and the increase in traveler time outdoors both near and far away from home. Global Rescue is the first and only travel risk and crisis management company providing Local Field Rescue.

“COVID-19 opened the door for people to explore and appreciate the great outdoors nearby, and people flooded through the doorway. But with an increase in local, outdoor activities there is a parallel expectation of the need for rescue services,” said Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards and a member of the U.S. Department of Commerce U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board.

“Improvise, adapt, overcome. Global Rescue’s Local Field Rescue perfectly captures the essence of what it takes to survive in turbulent times,” Brandt said.

“Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. We supply unparalleled resources to address the increasingly challenging and complex world in which we live,” Richards said.

Global Rescue’s pioneering methods and model have secured its reputation as the most forward-thinking service of its kind.

About International Awards Associate (IAA)

The International Awards Associate (IAA) is the organizer of the Titan Business Awards. IAA’s mission is to honor, promote and encourage professional excellence, from industry to industry, internationally and domestically, through award platforms that are industry appropriate. IAA assembled the TITAN Business Awards to bring attention to the international business industry and promote their strategies, cultures, and teamwork to the world.  

About Global Rescue 

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises, including COVID-19. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

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Rescue-Ready on Mount Everest 

The Himalayan climbing season is here. And so is Global Rescue, having again deployed its medical operations personnel to the region to support emergency rescue operations for our mountaineering and trekking members.

The Himalayan climbing season is here. And so is Global Rescue, having again deployed its medical operations personnel to the region to support emergency rescue operations for our mountaineering and trekking members.


High-altitude mountain climbers are in the Himalaya range preparing for the 2022 spring climbing season. Whether it’s Mera Peak (21,247 feet/6,476 meters), Annapurna (26,545 feet/8,091 meters), Mount Everest (29,035 feet/8,848) or one of the many others, whenever high-altitude trekkers and mountaineers convene for high-risk, life-changing ascents, Global Rescue medical operations experts deploy to the region to help save lives.

“We have boots on the ground to support medical operations, logistical and emotional support. People traveling to the Himalaya region to climb and trek are in unfamiliar circumstances, and we can help,” said David Koo, a former combat medic, emergency nurse, associate director of operations for Global Rescue, and a member of Global Rescue’s Mountain Advisory Council. “We deploy anytime it’s a primary activity area, where we have a lot of members taking part in extreme activities. We have a lot of medical support wherever we deploy.”

helicopter-ready-for-everest

For more than two years, the coronavirus pandemic disrupted international mountaineering, closing or limiting access to popular, challenging mountains worldwide. It’s unclear what COVID-19 or its variants will mean for the 2022 spring climbing season. But experts are making predictions based on their experience and observations.

Legendary high-climber and a member of the Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council, Ed Viesturs, says it’ll be interesting to see what countries like Nepal and Pakistan require for entry. “There won’t be any climbing access from the China side. Outfitters will instigate their own protocols to protect their clients as well as their business operations,” he said.

“Last year, Mount Everest hit record permit numbers but it happened very late,” said Dan Stretch, operations manager for Global Rescue, a veteran of deployments to Nepal during the climbing seasons and a member of Global Rescue’s Mountain Advisory Council. “This year, like most things, high-climbs in the Himalayas are still unclear.”

Providing nonstop, 24/7 medical emergency support for a massive number of people taking part in extreme, high-altitude activities is not for the faint of heart. Koo says you need to be flexible and physically fit to be efficient on the ground.

rescuing-an-everest-climber

Photo © David Koo, Global Rescue’s Associate Director of Operations

“Nothing will be spoon-fed to you. Thankfully, over the number of years of having boots on the ground, we have developed close relationships with our partners, both helicopter and hospital providers. They have always been a strong support for the team on the ground. We constantly research the area and the resources available. We stay close to the airport to coordinate and be part of airborne transports. Unexpected weather plays a big role. We make certain to have a plan B that includes a sleeping bag, portable oxygen canisters and more when we pack — in case we have to overnight on the mountain at Mount Everest Base Camp (17,598 feet/5,364 meters) to support emergency rescue operations,” he said.

The Global Rescue deployment team remains on-site for the duration of the two-month climbing season. The days are long, often lasting up to 16 hours.

“We are active from sunrise to sundown. If there are no ongoing rescues, that’s when we follow-up with rescued members, check on their care, complete administrative requirements and rest up. Each deployed team member has at least one day a week to chill out, get a massage, go sightseeing, do anything to rest, recuperate and prepare for the next few days,” Koo said.

helicopter-pickup

This year will be a little different due to the pandemic. The challenge with operating during a pandemic is that the enemy – a disease – is invisible. “We have to protect ourselves and be vigilant to protect others. We’ll be wearing masks, avoiding crowds when possible, and we’re all vaccinated,” he said.

Global Rescue is the leading emergency rescue resource for mountaineers, climbers and those who love the mountains. The Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council helps keep services at peak level. The Mountain Advisory Council is led by Viesturs, world-famous high-altitude climber Nirmal “Nims” Purja, outdoor adventure safety expert and longtime mountaineering author Jed Williamson, Koo and Stretch.

Additional Mountain Advisory Council members include:

  • Wilderness and altitude sickness expert Dr. Eric Johnson is a Global Rescue associate medical director, past president of the Wilderness Medical Society and member of the Board of Directors of the Himalaya Rescue Association. Johnson is also one of the founders of Everest ER.
  • Special operations and critical planning authority Scott Hume is Global Rescue’s vice president operations and the former Chief Operations Officer of the 3rd Brigade 25th Infantry Division.  
  • Former Navy SEAL and manager of Global Rescue Security Operations Harding Bush has extensive mountain and cold weather operations expertise. He has developed multiple training programs for ski mountaineering and cold weather survival. He is a graduate of several U.S. and NATO Mountaineering courses including the Slovenian Mountain Warfare School.

Yaks-on-Everest

Stretch predicts that 2022 will be wide open on Mount Everest. “If 2021 is anything to go by, there won’t be any limitations on group size. Expect record permits distributed with no enforced rules. Climbers should go with expedition organizers who take COVID-19 precautions seriously,” he said.

Koo and his deployment team are taking it all in stride. “We are comfortable in Nepal. Our partners are super nice. It’s like a second home.”

 

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SURVEY: War Time Travelers Cautiously Continue Trips

Travelers postpone Eastern Europe and European trips; add security services to travel protection Lebanon, N.H. – April 25, 2022 – Most international trip takers (89%) are not changing travel plans due to the war in…

Travelers postpone Eastern Europe and European trips; add security services to travel protection

Lebanon, N.H. – April 25, 2022 – Most international trip takers (89%) are not changing travel plans due to the war in Ukraine. But travelers planning to visit Europe or Eastern European countries are postponing or canceling their excursions, according to the world’s most experienced travelers taking the Global Rescue Spring 2022 Traveler Safety and Sentiment Survey.

Forty-two percent of travelers say the war in Ukraine caused them to cancel or postpone a trip to Russia, Ukraine or any other country in Eastern Europe. Nearly the same percentage (36%) say the war caused them to cancel or postpone a trip to Europe.

According to the survey, 43% of travelers say the war in Ukraine makes them more or much more likely to obtain travel security services that provide evacuation and advisory when you are in danger due to things like insurgent attacks, civil unrest and unpredictable natural disasters.

“War makes adjacent regions unpredictable and potentially more dangerous and understandably drives travelers to global destinations with no threat of conflict. These conditions also increase demand for extra travel protection services,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.

While many travelers are delaying trips due to the war, an equal number are not. More than a third (37%) of respondents say they did not cancel or postpone a trip to Europe, according to the survey.

“Traveler concerns are split about going abroad. Nearly half (43%) of travelers say they are somewhat concerned about international travel but 28% are not concerned at all while the same percentage are much more concerned,” Richards said.

Once travelers are abroad, military conflict is among the least of their concerns. Thirty-nine percent say having an accident, sustaining an injury, or getting sick (but not with COVID) is the biggest non-COVID fear about international travel followed by trip cancellation (22%), civil unrest and terrorism (16%), war (8%), being robbed (7%), natural disaster (3%) and identity theft (2%).

“People are born with a natural desire to travel and explore. Despite the pandemic, the war, rising fuel costs, government and airline policies and other barriers to travel, people are going to travel in record numbers this year,” Richards said referring to the World Travel & Tourism Council projections that travel will surpass pre-pandemic levels.

About the Global Rescue Traveler Sentiment and Safety Survey

Global Rescue, the leading travel risk and crisis response provider, conducted a survey of more than 1,200 of its current and former members between April 5 and 9, 2022. The respondents exposed a significant range in travel confidence and international travel activity as well as preferences for international travel policies.

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com. 

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Duty of Care and The Future of Digital Nomads

What is duty of care and how does it play a role in this new work-from-anywhere world?

What is duty of care and how does it play a role in this new work-from-anywhere world?


The pandemic has changed the business workforce for the near future. Increasing digital nomadism and more location-independent workers are driving focused attention among business leaders and their duty of care requirements. 

Employment attorney Nicola Comelli agrees. “As an employer, managing digital nomads can be a compliance minefield,” he said.

What is the duty of care definition? According to Jeffrey Ment, managing partner of The Ment Law Group, P.C., in Hartford, Connecticut, “duty of care means an organization has a legal obligation to take reasonable care of its traveling employees, students, faculty and so on. Duty of care means acting reasonably as a prudent person or company should act under the circumstances. What might be reasonable for travel to Miami, might not be the same reasonable for travel to Dubai.”

Popularity of the Digital Nomad Practice 

the-rise-in-digital-nomads

The “work-from-anywhere” model isn’t new, it was on the rise before 2019. But the pandemic boosted its participants. According to a study by the Harvard Business Review, Americans self-describing as digital nomads rose by 49%, from 7.3 million in 2019 to 10.9 million in 2020.

The recent surge is coming from people who once held traditional office jobs. “Traditional jobholders now make up a majority of those pursuing this nontraditional work lifestyle,” according to the study.

Changes in the workforce mean duty of care must evolve, too. “Duty of care today is different than it was three years ago when we weren’t thinking about COVID,” Ment said. “Today, duty of care encompasses COVID-related things like planning for procuring testing kits if you’re going to have testing kits made available to your employees in another country because they’re not able to get a testing center, or there isn’t one. Duty of care evolves with the times.”

“The pandemic has demonstrated productive work can be done from almost anywhere and that is leading to people taking advantage of that circumstance,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue. “The prospect of working from anywhere under more flexible attendance policies is going to give many staffers the ability to live and work in places they couldn’t before.”

Digital Nomadism & Duty of Care

Digital nomadism doesn’t change an employer’s duty of care obligations, but it certainly raises awareness among C-suite executives, senior management teams, HR professionals, union leaders, government agencies and employees to examine the rigor of their organization’s current duty of care capabilities.

Employers are responsible for complying with local employment laws. If you have staff working in another country then you may be bound by foreign employment laws – including payroll tax payments, social security contributions, holiday allowances, overtime pay, maximum working hours and more. Failure to comply could result in fines or legal action.

“Your duty of care for a diverse array of travelers – like digital nomads and bleisure travelers – must provide what they need,” Ment said.

Work visas and permits can be cumbersome. Digital nomads often rely on tourist visas to enter a foreign country since that documentation is easier to obtain than a work permit. But that could be against the law depending on the duration of your stay. Forty-one countries, including Portugal, Greece and Thailand, have introduced “digital nomad visas” to remove that bureaucratic gap.

These “digital nomad visas” give workers “the legal right to work remotely while residing away from their country of permanent residence,” said Ward Williams, an associate editor with Investopedia.

Richards agrees but points out metropolitan areas may not benefit. “This will be good for the economies of many semi-rural communities, but it could be troublesome for cities.”

Managers must be aware of their employees’ locations. While the staff member is responsible for getting permission to work in a foreign country, it is up to company leadership for the business to comply with the laws of the host country.

Employer Responsibility in This “Work From Anywhere” World

digital-nomadism-and-travel-risk

One of the biggest management challenges in this evolving environment will be the ability for company leaders to update and meet their duty of care requirements to protect their employees whether they are office-bound, location-independent, or on business travel.

Company leaders like CEOs, chief security officers, travel managers and human resources directors are accountable for the development and oversight of policies, programs and logistics that protect traveling staff, whether they are office-bound or not.

“They carry a duty of care responsibility to their people, to take care of them and avoid exposing them to any unnecessary or undue risk,” Richards said. “Managing the duty of care responsibilities for a remote workforce will be a new challenge as unprecedented numbers of employees log in from the beach, mountains and other places where they’ve chosen to live,” he said.

Ment agrees. “The old plans aren’t good enough anymore. They’re rusty and they need to be dusted off and refreshed.”

Global Rescue can help you sort through the seven elements of a duty of care policy, including:

  1. Who are the company directors or officers responsible for fulfilling the organization’s duty of care?
  2. Does the policy include a risk assessment that includes the organization’s travel risk profile?
  3. Is there a risk management plan?
  4. Does the policy include a crisis response plan?
  5. What is the education or training program for employees and travel risk management providers?
  6. Is there a tracking method or technology capable of monitoring and assessing incidents?
  7. Does the program include a post-travel feedback mechanism to help refine risk management and crisis response plans?

“It is essential that an organization’s leadership learn the laws, regulations, standards and prevailing practices of countries where their employees are visiting as digital nomads,” Ment said. “Doing so can insulate the organization from multi-million dollar judgments and significant harm to the organization’s reputation and brand.” 

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A Travel Story: Journey to the Middle of Nowhere

Chris Brown, an explorer with the goal of reaching all seven Poles of Inaccessibility, hired Global Rescue security and operation experts to guide his Africa trip.

All Photos © Cat Vinton

Chris Brown, an explorer with the goal of reaching all seven Poles of Inaccessibility, hired Global Rescue security and operation experts to guide his Africa trip.


Chris Brown, an inveterate explorer and adventurer from the United Kingdom, knew about the Seven Summits Challenge, where people set a goal to climb the highest mountain on each of the seven continents.

But the idea wasn’t for him.

Instead, he turned the concept into his version of the Seven Summits: The Seven Poles of Inaccessibility.

“A Pole of Inaccessibility is the location in a geographical area that is the furthest away from all its borders,” writes Brown on his blog, Poles of Inaccessibility. “The borders could be physical, such as the sea, or political, such as a state boundary.”

There is one pole on each of the five largest land masses on Earth (North America, South America, Africa, Eurasia and Australia) and the two frozen poles (Northern and Southern).

Brown’s goal is to become the first person to visit all seven.

“I’m an explorer at heart,” Brown said. “I would have loved to have lived years ago when countries were being discovered or years in the future when we might be exploring planets. For now, I make do with the corners of the Earth that may not have been visited by many people. It’s not so much about the actual remoteness but the journey getting there and the people I meet along the way.”

Expedition to Africa

Brown’s first successful attempt was the North American Pole of Inaccessibility on land belonging to the Oglala Sioux Tribe in South Dakota. An attempt at the Antarctic Pole of Inaccessibility was thwarted by a series of mechanical faults and four enormous Antarctic hurricanes.

His next bid: African Pole of Inaccessibility.

“At first sight, the trip didn’t seem too difficult.  I’d take a regular flight to the capital, Bangui, hire a car, and drive Route National Number 2 to the township of Obo,” Brown said. “I’d overnight at a hotel and, the next day, drive a track shown on Google maps to a location close to the pole, then travel through the jungle to the pole. Of course, I’d need local help for the last part, but it all seemed so possible.”

Research quickly proved this pole was located not only in the hardest part of the continent to reach, but close to one of Africa’s more politically contentious border intersections: the tripoint meeting of the Central African Republic (CAR), the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan.

Central-African-Republic-photo-by-Cat-Vinton

“The entire region is best described as unstable. Travel in and around CAR is dangerous. Several governments advise against all travel in the country, with the exception of the airport at Bangui and the city center for only essential travel,” Brown said.

Global Rescue’s destination reports summarize the challenges: Sudan’s borders are militarized and violence breaks out regularly. The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) is active near the border with Uganda and violence between tribal groups is common. The Democratic Republic of the Congo is affected by political instability and high rates of crime. Violent militias control areas in the eastern region. In the CAR, sectarian tensions often escalate into violence. Armed bandits pose a threat, which is compounded by a weak and corrupt police force.

Risk Mitigation from Start to Finish

Brown, the owner and director of an internet marketing business, decided to hire some security experts for his trip.

Fortunately, he was already a Global Rescue member. Brown knew Global Rescue offered customized security and travel risk solutions.

“I dropped an email to Global Rescue and received a reply within hours: ‘Call me.’ That I did and explained briefly I wanted to get to a specific location near a small town in CAR called Obo,” Brown said.  “It turned out the guy I’d reached at Global Rescue had actually ‘worked’ in Obo.”

Global Rescue’s in-house operation center is staffed by experienced nurses, paramedics and military special forces veterans, including former Green Berets, Navy SEALs, Army Rangers and Defense Intelligence Agency personnel. Brown happened to get a Global Rescue security expert who is a veteran of the United States Army Special Forces and had experience with the LRA.

After Brown’s initial intake call, the team got to work on a feasibility study. Global Rescue looked at the trip from all aspects: aviation assets, country clearances, COVID restrictions, terrain and weather analysis, and logistical analysis.

Brown was briefed throughout the planning process, offering input and signing off on the proposed course of action.

“It’s a highly individualized project I’ve set for myself, and I only know of two other people who are trying to visit all of the poles,” Brown said. “If anyone is daft enough, I’d strongly suggest they work with experts like Global Rescue who have hands-on experience in the exact region.”

Planning Around Civil Unrest and COVID-19

helicopter-in-Africa-photo-by-Cat-Vinton

It’s not an easy task to plan a trip to an area with a host of risks from terrain (a triple-canopy rainforest) to temperature (38 Celsius/100 Fahrenheit with high humidity) to transmission (Zika virus, Dengue Fever, Ebola and COVID-19) to target (unmarked and more than 1,100 miles from the nearest coast).

With medical and security teams staffed and led by experienced special operations veterans, Global Rescue excels at complicated travel plans. The operations team developed a five-phase plan with a timeline, key actions and contingency plans for each phase.

“The Global Rescue Security Team planned and led the entire operation,” said Harding Bush, manager of operations at Global Rescue. “The intelligence and medical teams also provided support during the planning process and backside support throughout the operation. It was a turnkey operation for the client.”

The result: a 40-page PowerPoint that looks at every detail of the trip — down to the minute. Say, for example, the team meets with civil unrest in Bangui. “The team will shelter in place and assess the situation to determine whether to continue or abort,” Bush said

What if the team meets up with hostile forces on the ground in Obo? Team will move 5 km away from the area and make communication with the air crew to determine the next action.

COVID-19 restrictions also shaped the trip.

“Our original planned route took us through Morocco into CAR, but COVID restrictions and quarantines would have hindered our travel, increased our travel time significantly, and ultimately increased our exposure for something to go wrong,” Bush said.

The issue with the new plan: all flights over CAR territory require government permission and have to originate in Bangui.

“We needed a government facilitator. Global Rescue’s contacts in the region were at the base of the whole operation. Without them, none of it would have happened,” Brown said.

Mission Accomplished

The result? Two Global Rescue operations and logistics experts flew from the U.S. to the U.K. to meet Brown and mission photographer Cat Vinton in London.

The next stop was Bangui, but “the original commercial flight itinerary out of London into Bangui (via Air France) was rescheduled,” Bush said. “We had a buffer planned in to our travel timeline that would have allowed us to take the rescheduled flight and still attain mission success, but decided to book another itinerary (through Kenya Air) to save the buffer in case we needed it later.”

The next day, the group took a two-hour chartered aircraft from Bangui Airport to the dirt airfield in Obo, meeting up with the Forces Armées Centrafricaines (FACA) security detail, four soldiers from the local armed forces. A second chartered flight, this time on a helicopter, delivered the team in two stages to the designated site.

Once there, “we had to pick our way through fairly dense jungle with the helicopter hovering above our position, out of small arms fire range, in case of emergency,” Brown said. “High temperatures and high humidity combined with a total lack of air movement under the canopy made this the hardest section of the trip. The pace was unrelenting with time constraints on both the helicopter fuel and a night curfew for returning to Bangui.”

The trip to the African Pole of Inaccessibility was a success. The team pinned down the exact point (5°39.0’N, 26°10.2’E), took photographs and an earth sample.

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African-Pole-of-Inaccessibility-photo-by-Cat-Vinton

Outside of one flight being rescheduled, the expedition went according to plan.

“There isn’t much we would have done differently. Maybe if the COVID-19 conditions were different we would have taken a more direct route to get in and out of CAR, but it worked out fine with Kenya Air,” Bush said.

Is the quest to reach the Poles of Inaccessibility suitable for the average traveler?

“In CAR and many other African countries, the situation can go sideways in an instant,” Bush said. “With proper planning, risk mitigation and experienced personnel leading the expedition the average traveler would have a great experience.”

Brown’s quest continues. He cancelled an attempt at the Northern Pole of Inaccessibility in April 2022 because of the war between Russia and Ukraine, but, as soon as possible, he’ll arrange an expedition to the Australian Point of Inaccessibility in the remote outback of Australia.

“Why don’t you visit a PIA with Global Rescue?” Brown said. “It’s far more interesting than just visiting the usual attractions.”

If you’re planning an expedition in a remote or dangerous destination, Global Rescue provides unparalleled travel risk, crisis management and staffing solutions to individuals, businesses, NGOs, academic institutions and governments worldwide. Since 2004, Global Rescue has set the industry standard for emergency action plan consulting and medical and security staffing solutions. Let our highly experienced team help you in an increasingly complex and dangerous travel world.

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Controversial Travel Policy Hamstrings Travel Recovery, Divide Traveler Preferences

Travelers plan to spend more time and money on trips to make up for lost travel Lebanon, N.H. – April 18, 2022 – Travelers want a pandemic-related policy requirement for negative COVID test before returning…

Travelers plan to spend more time and money on trips to make up for lost travel

Lebanon, N.H. – April 18, 2022 – Travelers want a pandemic-related policy requirement for negative COVID test before returning to the U.S. from abroad eliminated, according to the world’s most experienced travelers responding to the Global Rescue Spring 2022 Traveler Safety and Sentiment Survey.

A third of travelers (32%) say the U.S. government should immediately eliminate for everyone the requirement for a negative COVID test for fully vaccinated inbound international travelers to the U.S. while nearly an equal amount (34%) say the requirement should be removed for U.S. citizens but not non-citizens.

“Unfortunately, many of today’s governmental rules are not medically indicated.  We’re hopeful that changes soon,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.

The overwhelming majority of travelers (84%) are less or much less concerned about travel today compared to the beginning of the pandemic. But 15% of survey-takers report producing a negative COVID-19 test to meet U.S. re-entry requirements is their main travel concern behind being stranded away from home after testing positive for COVID-19.

According to the survey, many travelers believe they no longer need pandemic protocols, including masking and physical distancing. Almost half of the respondents (42%) say there are no pandemic-related behaviors they plan to continue unless required. A third (33%) of respondents disagree and say they plan to continue masking despite easing of mask requirements.

“Travelers want to travel now more than ever. One–out–of four travelers (27%) will spend more time or more money – or both – on trips to make up for curtailed travel due to the pandemic. They’re going to get their travel revenge once governments allow them to move with fewer or no restrictions,” Richards said.

About the Global Rescue Traveler Sentiment and Safety Survey

Global Rescue, the leading travel risk and crisis response provider, conducted a survey of more than 1,200 of its current and former members between April 5 and 9, 2022. The respondents exposed a significant range in travel confidence and international travel activity as well as preferences for international travel policies.

Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.