Collaborating On Climate Change

Two global initiatives, the Future of Tourism Coalition and Tourism Declares, have joined forces to develop a blueprint for climate action in destinations.

The blueprint will combine the frameworks, tools, best practices and resources required for destinations to deliver action plans that align tourism with efforts to reduce global emissions by at least 50% before 2030 and minimize the impact of global warming.

It will be published in time for the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in November, and will be available as a free, practical resource for anyone to use.

The hope is that the blueprint will be adopted as the standard approach to scale up climate action and transform the industry.

Other climate action blueprints are also being created by Tourism Declares for accommodation providers and tour operators.

Supporters and members of both the Future of Tourism and Tourism Declares initiatives will help co-create the destination blueprint, and a smaller group of “Destination Climate Leaders” will be identified to lead the process. Progress will be shared regularly on the Tourism Declares and Future of Tourism websites and other channels to encourage wider consultation and contributions from anyone working on this issue.

Jeremy Smith, co-founder of Tourism Declares, said: “It is essential that 2021 is a turning point for our industry, the year when delivering against science-based Climate Action Plans becomes standard practice for travel and tourism organizations.”

Smith continued: “It is great that the Future of Tourism Coalition is aligned to this ambition, and we shall combine our expertise and growing community networks to co-create a new, low-carbon, destination blueprint.”

Jeremy Sampson, Chair of the Future of Tourism Coalition, commented: “We’ve been working closely with Tourism Declares since we launched last summer, as climate change is the big issue that cuts right across our 13 Guiding Principles for the future of tourism. We would like our two initiatives to align as seamlessly as possible, as we need engagement, insights, experience and expertise from all parts of our diverse industry to find the best solutions for tomorrow’s tourism.”

The Future of Tourism Coalition itself has recently declared a climate emergency and will be encouraging its 500-strong community of organizations signed-up to their 13 Guiding Principles to also “declare”.

For more, go to www.tourismdeclares.com or visit www.futureoftourism.org .