News | National
12 Dec 2024 23:25
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Surging global tourism emissions are driven by just 20 countries – major new study

    Tourism emissions have been increasing at twice the rate of the global economy. That will double over the next 20 years, far outpacing technological solutions. New tourism policies will be needed.

    James Higham, Professor of Tourism, Griffith University, Ya-Yen Sun, Associate Professor, School of Business, The University of Queensland
    The Conversation


    Surging global tourism emissions are driven almost entirely by 20 countries, and efforts to rein in the trend aren’t working.

    That is the main finding of our new research, published in Nature Communications today. It represents the most rigorous and comprehensive analysis of tourism emissions yet conducted.

    The study draws together multiple datasets, including those published directly by 175 governments over 11 years (2009-2020). It uses the United Nations-endorsed “measurement of sustainable tourism” framework and draws on tourism expenditure and emissions intensity data from national accounts.

    The findings reveal serious challenges ahead, given the wider context. The UN Environment Programme reports a 42% reduction in current global emissions overall is needed by 2030 (and 57% by 2035). If not, the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees will be lost.

    But global tourism emissions have been growing at double the rate of the global economy. Our study reveals that between 2009 and 2019, emissions increased by 40%, from 3.7 gigatonnes (7.3% of global emissions) in 2009 to 5.2 gigatonnes (8.8% of global emissions) in 2019.

    While global tourism emissions fell dramatically in 2020-2021 due to COVID-19, the rebound to pre-pandemic levels has been rapid.

    tourismemissions.org, CC BY-ND

    Massive growth without a technological fix

    Tourism-related emissions increased at a yearly rate of 3.5% from 2009 to 2019. By comparison, global economic growth in general over that period was 1.5% per annum. If this growth rate continues, global tourism emissions will double over the next two decades.

    The carbon intensity of every dollar of tourist spending is 30% higher than the average for the global economy, and four times higher than the service sector.

    The primary driver of rising emissions is high growth in tourism demand. The rapidly expanding carbon footprint is predominantly from aviation (21%), use of vehicles powered by petrol and deisel (17%), and utilities such as electricity supply (16%).

    Slow efficiency gains through technology have been overwhelmed by this growth in demand.

    Aviation accounted for half of direct tourism emissions, making it the Achilles heel of global tourism emissions. Despite decades of promises, the global air transport system has proved impossible to decarbonise through new technologies.

    tourismemissions.org, CC BY-ND

    20 countries dominate emissions

    Our research revealed alarming inequalities in emissions growth between countries. The United States, China and India accounted for 60% of the growth in tourism emissions between 2009 and 2019. By 2019, these three countries alone were responsible for 39% of total global tourism emissions.

    Three-quarters of total global tourism emissions are produced by just 20 countries, with the remaining 25% shared between 155. Remarkably, there is now a hundred-fold difference in per-capta tourism footprints between countries which travel most and those which travel least.

    Of the top 20, the US (as a foreign destination, as well as its citizens travelling) had the largest tourism carbon footprint in 2019 – nearly 1 gigatonne. It was responsible for 19% of the total global tourism carbon footprint, growing at an annual rate of 3.2%.

    In 2019, the US tourism carbon footprint was equivalent to 3 tonnes per resident, ranking 12th globally among countries with the highest per-capita tourism emissions.

    As a destination, the United Kingdom ranked 7th globally, at 128 megatonnes (2.5% of the total). In 2019, UK residents produced 2.8 tonnes of emissions per person, ranked 15th globally.

    Australia’s tourism carbon footprint ranked 14th globally (82 megatonnes). Its resident per-capita tourism carbon footprint in 2019 was 3.4 tonnes (8th globally). This underscores the high emissions being driven by long-haul air travel for inbound and outbound international trips.

    In 2019, New Zealand’s per-capita tourism carbon footprint was 3.1 tonnes per resident (10th globally). Like Australia, dependence on long-haul international travel is a problem that cannot be ignored.

    Tourism was included in discussions for the first time at this year’s COP29 conference. Getty Images

    4 pathways to decarbonising tourism

    For the first time ever, this year’s UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP29) included tourism. UN Tourism endorsed our study and acknowledged tourism now contributes 8.8% of total global emissions.

    It reported that COP29 “marks a turning point, when ambition meets action, and vision transforms into commitment […] to positive transformation for a better future for our planet”.

    But our research shows the combination of tourism demand growth on one hand, and the failure of technology efficiency gains on the other, present enormous barriers to tourism carbon mitigation.

    Despite this, we have identified four pathways towards stabilising and reducing global tourism emissions:

    1. Measure tourism carbon emissions to identify hotspots. Our research provides evidence of the tourism sub-sectors driving high emissions growth, including aviation, energy supply and vehicle use. These hotspots must move onto a 10% annual emissions reduction pathway to 2050.

    2. Avoid excessive tourism development and identify sustainable growth thresholds. National tourism decarbonisation strategies must now define and implement sustainable growth goals, most urgently in the 20 highest-emitting tourism destinations.

    3. Shift focus to domestic and short-range markets, and discourage long-haul markets. Actively managing growth in demand for air travel is the most obvious first step, which might involve regulating long-haul air travel demand.

    4. Address inequality between countries by factoring in the social costs of carbon emissions. Controlling current patterns of relentless growth in long-haul air travel aligns with a more socially equitable approach to tourism, which is needed to address these inequalities.

    The fundamental purpose of our research is to give policymakers and industry leaders greater clarity about tourism’s impact on global emissions. The challenge then is to develop evidence-based policy and regulation to achieve urgent tourism decarbonisation.


    The authors acknowledge the contributions of Stefan Gössling, Manfred Lenzen and Futu Faturay who were part of the research team on this project, and who coauthored the Nature Communications paper on which this article is based.


    The Conversation

    James Higham receives funding from the NZ Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Endeavour Programme.

    Ya-Yen Sun receives funding from the Australian Research Council to support this project.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     12 Dec: Auckland Police have launched an investigation - after footage emerged of two uniformed police officers - trying a stripper's pole inside a private property
     12 Dec: Firefighters and two helicopters are continuing to work on dampening down a 30 hectare vegetation fire - next to State Highway 1 near Burnham, Canterbury
     12 Dec: Evacuees near a scrub fire on the outskirts of Christchurch have been given the all clear to return
     12 Dec: Police have arrested a man - accused of aiming a gun at a person in Manurewa yesterday
     12 Dec: Canterbury Rally and Rally Coromandel will return to the New Zealand Championship next year
     12 Dec: Police want to hear from people who may have witnessed concerning behaviour before a Hutt Valley homicide
     12 Dec: Canterbury fire crews have been called to a grass fire in Burnham, south of Christchurch
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    An early visit from The Grinch for many All Blacks - with Ford set to end their sponsorship of New Zealand Rugby More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Changes to tenancy laws have passed their third reading in the House More...



     Today's News

    Law and Order:
    Auckland Police have launched an investigation - after footage emerged of two uniformed police officers - trying a stripper's pole inside a private property 21:57

    Entertainment:
    Taylor Swift has issued a public thank you to "every single" fan who came to see 'The Eras Tour' 21:54

    Entertainment:
    Peter Andre has booked an "emotional" trip home to visit his sick mom in Australia 21:24

    Christchurch:
    Firefighters and two helicopters are continuing to work on dampening down a 30 hectare vegetation fire - next to State Highway 1 near Burnham, Canterbury 21:17

    Entertainment:
    Sian Welby has got a "new perspective" on life since welcoming her daughter Ruby into the world 20:54

    Entertainment:
    Emilia Perez looks set to be the big winner at the 2025 Golden Globes after scooping 10 nominations 20:24

    Entertainment:
    Taylor Swift sold more than $2 billion worth of tickets for her 'Eras Tour' 19:54

    Entertainment:
    Queen Elizabeth used to wear her Imperial State Crown to bath her kids 19:24

    Business:
    Changes to tenancy laws have passed their third reading in the House 18:57

    Entertainment:
    Olivia Wilde thinks social media is "dangerous" for filmmaking 18:54


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd