Abstract
The period leading to and immediately after the release of the IPCC’s fifth series of
climate change assessments saw substantial efforts by climate change denial interests
to portray anthropogenic climate change (ACC) as either unproven theory or a
negligible contribution to natural climate variability, including the relationship
between tourism and climate change. This paper responds to those claims by stressing
that the extent of scientific consensus suggests that human-induced warming of the
climate system is unequivocal. Second, it responds in the context of tourism research
and ACC, highlighting tourism’s significant contribution to greenhouse gas emissions,
as well as climate change’s potential impacts on tourism at different scales. The paper
exposes the tactics used in ACC denial papers to question climate change science by
referring to non-peer-reviewed literature, outlier studies, and misinterpretation of
research, as well as potential links to think tanks and interest groups. The paper
concludes that climate change science does need to improve its communication
strategies but that the world-view of some individuals and interests likely precludes
acceptance. The connection between ACC and sustainability illustrates the need for
debate on adaptation and mitigation strategies, but that debate needs to be grounded in
scientific principles not unsupported skepticism.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 4-25 |
Journal | Journal of Sustainable Tourism |
Volume | 23 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2015 |
Keywords
- environmental kuznets curve
- sustainable tourism
- international tourism
- scientific consensus
- temperature-changes
- economic-growth
- science
- reanalysis
- policy
- flows