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Tourism set to suffer from the climate change it generates: UN

by Staff Writers
Davos, Switzerland (AFP) Oct 1, 2007
A booming worldwide tourism industry could prove its own worst enemy by contributing to the global warming that threatens some of the planet's most prized destinations, UN agencies warned Monday.

If no measures are taken, tourism's impact on climate change is set to more than double in the next 30 years, according to advance data from a report by the UN tourism, environment and weather agencies.

"The tourism industry is both challenged by climate change and a contributor to greenhouse gas emissions," UN Environment Programme (UNEP) Executive Director Achim Steiner said at an international conference in Davos, Switzerland.

Coastal, mountain and nature destinations, especially in poor countries or island states like the Maldives, are likely to be the most affected by weather shifts and rising sea levels or temperatures, according to extracts from the report on climate change and tourism.

While travel to other destinations in more temperate areas might grow, global warming could drain a vital part of the economic lifeblood of some least-developed countries, it added.

UN World Tourism Organisation Secretary General Franco Frangialli called for immediate action from the industry and public authorities, even though tourism's contribution to global warming is smaller than many other industries.

"Climate change is pushing the world of tourism to a revolution, not only an economic and technological one, but also a cultural one," he told the three day conference in this Swiss Alpine resort

"The Swiss Alps suffered due to a lack of snow this winter and it's not due to chance. Tourism contributes to climate change just as it is a victim (of it)," he added.

Transport, accommodation and other tourism activites already account for four to six percent of global greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change, according to the report, which is due to be released later this year.

But the industry's growth could lead to a 150 percent increase in its carbon dioxide emissions alone in the next 30 years, the UNWTO, UNEP and the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) agencies said.

Just under three-quarters of the carbon dioxide produced by tourism comes for transport -- 40 percent from aircraft and 32 percent from cars, while accommodation accounts for an estimated 21 percent, the report said.

Emissions are being driven by the rapid increase in international travel, with about 846 million international trips worldwide last year and growing at an average annual rate of 6.5 percent since 1950, according to the UNWTO.

The number of international trips is expected to nearly double to 1.6 billion by 2020.

The global tourist industry is now worth 880 billion dollars annually, surpassing oil exports, food production or the auto industry, it said.

Travel to and from the poorest countries that rely heavily on tourism represents only a small proportion of trips but they are among the ones most exposed to climate change, Frangialli stressed.

He said that overall efforts in the industry to tackle climate change could also contribute to poverty reduction in such countries.

"Tourism is an important player in both as it represents the main economic driving force for several developing states," Frangialli said.

The Davos meeting is due to set the agenda for a ministerial summit on tourism and climate change in London on November 13.

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