Ouarzazate: From Logistical Isolation to a Systemic Development Emergency 67
Tourism and film professionals in Ouarzazate have once again expressed their anger with force and clarity. This isn't the first time they've risen up like this. In contrast, citizens murmur their frustrations quietly. Even when they shout their boiling rage, their voices seem blocked by the height of the Atlas peaks. They don't reach or don't clearly reach, where they need to.
Since Ouarzazate has been under the Errachidia region, authorities and elected regional bodies have focused on their own city and its immediate surroundings, relegating Ouarzazate "on the other side" to oblivion. These cries are no longer mere sectoral demands. They reveal a long-standing multidimensional structural crisis. Beyond the glaring failure of air connectivity, the most visible symptom of deep isolation, lies a fragile and incoherent territorial development model.
Professionals operating in Ouarzazate tell anyone who will listen that the city's tourist and cinematic appeal is in peril. In a globalized economy, the fluidity of flows determines competitiveness. The lack of direct flights from key European and North American source markets erodes Ouarzazate's attractiveness, a local economic pillar driven by its two flagship industries: tourism and cinema. Dependence on Casablanca or Marrakech hubs breaks the value chain, while logistical unpredictability deters tour operators and international productions. Add to that, it must be said, the surprisingly weak domestic air links.
This domino effect hammers the local economy. Hotels see declining occupancy, margins shrink, and recent investments lack profitability. Indirect jobs in guiding, transport, crafts, and restaurants become increasingly precarious.
If tour operators bypass the destination, film productions turn to more accessible rivals. Stays shorten dramatically. Ouarzazate isn't rejected: it's circumvented, which in tourism amounts to a gradual disappearance.
### The Mining Paradox: Wealth Without Local Benefits
Morocco's Southeast is rich in strategic minerals: silver, manganese, cobalt. Yet the value generated escapes the territory:
- Weak local redistribution: revenues are barely reinvested in infrastructure, skilled jobs, or public services.
- Enclave effect: mining sites are isolated, without economic integration.
- Negative externalities: intense pressure on water resources leads to environmental degradation without compensation.
- Lack of processing: exporting raw materials deprives the region of industrial value chains.
Thus, the territory generates wealth without building its future, deepening a profound sense of injustice.
### Governance Challenges and Systemic Risks
His Majesty King Mohammed VI has repeatedly denounced the "two-speed Morocco," highlighting serious governance failures. Yet, despite unprecedented discursive promotion, cinematic hub, gateway to the desert, Ouarzazate remains poorly integrated into a genuine unclogging strategy.
Where is the coordination between transport, tourism, and territorial development? Why do intangible infrastructures (connectivity, logistics) lag behind those in other regions?
Does anyone have a clear vision of Ouarzazate's role in the national economy?
This glaring deficit turns huge potential into fragility. The image suffers badly: complex access for travelers, uncertainties for productions. Perception being a key asset, a silent marginalization takes hold, threatening exit from international radars: fewer tourist nights, fewer films, fewer investments, fewer jobs. A vicious circle relegates this true center of excellence to forgotten peripheries.
### Rethinking the Model: Levers for Coherent Development
The challenge goes beyond the unclogging some imagine. The entire model must be rethought:
- By leveraging the mining sector to fund regional development, infrastructure, and training.
- By creating synergies across all sectors (mining, tourism, energy).
- By ensuring equitable wealth redistribution.
- By encouraging executives, especially natives or those from the region, to settle there, return, and invest.
- By integrating the region into a coherent national vision.
Without this, Ouarzazate will keep accumulating paradoxes:
Rich in resources, poor in benefits;
World-famous, locally marginalized.
In the end, it's no longer just an economic and social crisis penalizing Ouarzazate and its people, but a threat to territorial cohesion and justice itself. Ouarzazate's cries aim only to raise awareness of its ignored structural crisis...
Until when?