UN It’s time to limit how often we can travel abroad - ‘carbon passports’ may be the answer

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Shine Nucha/Shutterstock

Ross Bennett-Cook
Visiting Lecturer, School of Architecture + Cities, University of Westminster
Published: November 3, 2023 1:29pm EDT

The summer of 2023 has been very significant for the travel industry. By the end of July, international tourist arrivals globally reached 84% of pre-pandemic levels. In some European countries, such as France, Denmark and Ireland, tourism demand even surpassed its pre-pandemic level.

This may be great news economically, but there’s concern that a return to the status quo is already showing dire environmental and social consequences.

The summer saw record-breaking heatwaves across many parts of the world. People were forced to flee wildfires in Greece and Hawaii, and extreme weather warnings were issued in many popular holiday destinations like Portugal, Spain and Turkey. Experts attributed these extreme conditions to climate change.

Tourism is part of the problem. The tourism sector generates around one-tenth of the greenhouse gas emissions that are driving the climate crisis.
The negative impacts of tourism on the environment have become so severe that some are suggesting drastic changes to our travel habits are inevitable. In a report from 2023 that analysed the future of sustainable travel, tour operator Intrepid Travel proposed that “carbon passports” will soon become a reality if the tourism industry hopes to survive.

What is a carbon passport?​

The idea of a carbon passport centres on each traveller being assigned a yearly carbon allowance that they cannot exceed. These allowances can then “ration” travel.

This concept may seem extreme. But the idea of personal carbon allowances is not new. A similar concept (called “personal carbon trading”) was discussed in the House of Commons in 2008, before being shut down due to its perceived complexity and the possibility of public resistance.

The average annual carbon footprint for a person in the US is 16 tonnes – one of the highest rates in the world. In the UK this figure sits at 11.7 tonnes, still more than five times the figure recommended by the Paris Agreement to keep global temperature rise below 1.5°C.

Globally, the average annual carbon footprint of a person is closer to 4 tonnes. But, to have the best chance of preventing temperature rise from overshooting 2°C, the average global carbon footprint needs to drop to under 2 tonnes by 2050. This figure equates to around two return flights between London and New York.

Intrepid Travel’s report predicts that we will see carbon passports in action by 2040. However, several laws and restrictions have been put in place over the past year that suggest our travel habits may already be on the verge of change.

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Taking a flight from London to New York generates about 986kg of CO₂ per passenger. Eliyahu Yosef Parypa/Shutterstock

Targeting air travel​

Between 2013 and 2018, the amount of CO₂ emitted by commercial aircrafts worldwide increased by 32%. Improvements in fuel efficiency are slowly reducing per passenger emissions. But research from 2014 found that whatever the industry’s efforts to reduce its carbon emissions, they will be outweighed by the growth in air traffic.

For emission reductions to have any meaningful effect, ticket prices would have to rise by 1.4% each year, discouraging some people from flying. However, in reality, ticket prices are falling.

Some European countries are beginning to take measures to reduce air travel. As of April 1 2023, passengers on short-haul flights and older aircraft in Belgium have been subject to increased taxes to encourage alternative forms of travel.

Less than two months later France banned short-haul domestic flights where the same trip can be made by train in two-and-a-half hours or less. Spain is expected to follow suit.

A similar scheme could also be on the horizon for Germany. In 2021, a YouGov poll found that 70% of Germans would support such measures to fight climate change if alternative transport routes like trains or ships were available.

Cruises and carbon​

It’s not just air travel that’s being criticised. An investigation by the European Federation for Transport and Environment in 2023 found that cruise ships pump four times as many sulphuric gases (which are proven to cause acid rain and several respiratory conditions) into the atmosphere than all of Europe’s 291 million cars combined.

Statistics like these have forced European destinations to take action against the cruise industry. In July, Amsterdam’s council banned cruise ships from docking in the city centre in a bid to reduce tourism and pollution – an initiative that has shown success elsewhere.

In 2019 Venice was the most polluted European port, due to large numbers of cruise ship visits. But it dropped to 41st place in 2022 after a ban on large cruise ships entering the city’s waters reduced air pollutants from ships in Venice by 80%.

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In 2022, Venice imposed a ban on large cruise ships entering the city’s waters. Ugis Riba/Shutterstock

Changing destinations​

Intrepid Travel’s report also highlights that not only how we travel, but where we travel will soon be impacted by climate change. Boiling temperatures will probably diminish the allure of traditional beach destinations, prompting European tourists to search for cooler destinations such as Belgium, Slovenia and Poland for their summer holidays.

Several travel agencies reported seeing noticeable increases in holiday bookings to cooler European destinations like Scandinavia, Ireland and the UK during 2023’s peak summer travel months.

Whatever the solution may be, changes to our travel habits look inevitable. Destinations across the globe, from Barcelona to the Italian riveria and even Mount Everest are already calling for limits on tourist numbers as they struggle to cope with crowds and pollution.

Holidaymakers should prepare to change their travel habits now, before this change is forced upon them.

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How often does the average Joe travel abroad? I mean shit, I haven't even flown within the country.

These fucking demons want us all restricted because they are control freak tyrants and I hope they and all their propagandists die.
Not solely because they're tyrants - they're also completely out of touch, so they think we waste as much time on airplanes as they do on their private jets.
 
He is probably sincere in his belief that we should be restricted from travel while he would not be.

Like that quote from Chris Cuomo or whoever a couple years ago about how only journalists were educated and trained to interpret facts for us so it would be dangerous to let the masses have access to the raw facts, he probably thinks as a trained and educated Tourism Major he and a small elite should be allowed to vlog and write about travel while the rest of us sit home and vicariously live through him. Only trained tourist can be entrusted with experiencing other places and using carbon!
 
I remember hearing a story about some British npc functionary shouting "but we have to have the covid lockdowns for the climate lockdown!" in shock after hearing about lockdowns being lifted.
The lockdowns reduced carbon emissions on the roads and allowed wildlife to flourish vs getting run over or staying away from built-up areas. That caused the authoritarians' dicks to twitch over the thought of being able to run climate lockdowns.

They're coming, and as in my previous post, are happening subtly at the moment.

Just wait and see over the next few weeks how many major disruptions there are to airports. Be it technical glitches, strikes, companies going under or the weather.
 
No, fuck off. But if you really want to push it I think we could find some really nice places for you to all hang out from... i mean at.

These people and green/eco ideology isn't even trying to hide what they want anymore.

I've said this a bunch of times before and i will saying it again.. and keep saying it. Even IF this was all true and we needed to do all this to stop a real actual problem as severe as claimed.... I'd rather live on a planet like Coruscant, than in a mud hut or bug hive.. with humanity locked away as prisoners, with no greater aims or goals.. just waiting for nature to finish us off as another failed life form unable to rise above its whims. (just like 98%+ of all species to have ever existed)

I'll take this:

CoruscantGlobeE1.png

Coruscant-EotE.jpg

over that future! 100 times out of 100.. And this coming from someone who grew up around nature and woods etc. Away from cities.
 
The lockdowns reduced carbon emissions on the roads and allowed wildlife to flourish vs getting run over or staying away from built-up areas. That caused the authoritarians' dicks to twitch over the thought of being able to run climate lockdowns.

They're coming, and as in my previous post, are happening subtly at the moment.

Just wait and see over the next few weeks how many major disruptions there are to airports. Be it technical glitches, strikes, companies going under or the weather.
We're also knee deep into "climate refugees" now.
 
How often does the average Joe travel abroad? I mean shit, I haven't even flown within the country.

These fucking demons want us all restricted because they are control freak tyrants and I hope they and all their propagandists die.
The actually privileged, who rant about the masses being privileged, are out of touch. They assume normal peoples' lives are like theirs.
 
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The actually privileged, who rant about the masses being privileged, are out of touch. They assume normal peoples' lives are like theirs.
Oh no, they know the normal people are different, and they intend to keep it that way. You will sacrifice and eat the bugs so your masters can live it up in luxury.
 
Misc fun fact about the golden age of piracy. Part of the reason why so many young men willingly joined raiders is along with better wages than the ship companies, it also gave them an excuse to travel around. The open seas has lots of things to see and experience if you can survive scurvy and disease.

If they enact this along with their "own nothing, eat ze bugs, and be happy" future, expect to see swathes of men taking to the seas once more. Because the life of a pirate is far better than a life of a bughive dweller.
 
I'll believe that these idiots actually mean what they say when Klaus Schwab's private jets--plural--are all sent to the scrapyard to be salvaged for parts.
It won’t work like that. travel will be tax and carbon free for “feminism conferences” and social just summits as they’ll be deemed health emergencies. Kinda like what they did for the riots and labeling racism as a health emergency. Useful idiots will occasionally get to travel outside their 15 minute city for programming, elites will get to travel under the guise of attending emergency conferences that of course won’t be recorded or can be witnessed.
 
Misc fun fact about the golden age of piracy. Part of the reason why so many young men willingly joined raiders is along with better wages than the ship companies, it also gave them an excuse to travel around. The open seas has lots of things to see and experience if you can survive scurvy and disease.

If they enact this along with their "own nothing, eat ze bugs, and be happy" future, expect to see swathes of men taking to the seas once more. Because the life of a pirate is far better than a life of a bughive dweller.
I'm in if we get rid of the somalians and bring back the accents.
 
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While I personally dont see much appeal in travelling abroad cuz globalism made it sure everywhere looks the fucking same (thanks for that), I still find it vile to limit people's options

Now, of course, the usual suspects wont be affected. YOU will always do the sacrifices, not them.
 
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