New York Times claims ‘climate change’ means ‘the end of the summer vacation as we know it’ – ‘Our relationship to travel has reached a tipping point’


NYT: ‘Climate change’ May Make Summer Vacation A Thing of the Past!

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NYT warns of “scorching heat…fires, floods, tornadoes and hail storms”- August 5, 2023: “This year, everything from scorching heat to fires, floods, tornadoes and hail storms driven by climate change have disrupted the plans of travelers around the world. A summer getaway remains a powerful desire, but it’s at a tipping point…For decades, science has confirmed that unabated climate change will cause more misery, more hardship and cost millions of lives in the years to come. We’re getting a taste of the results this summer. Our relationship to travel has reached a tipping point. What happens when we can’t just vacation through it?”

Climate Depot comment: Despite the NYT’s carefully crafted narrative, tourists do not seem to care about climate change!

NYT laments: “Despite all the crises, global arrivals — the total number of tourists who cross a border — are projected to be up 30 percent from last year, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit,…And tourism is big business. The sector’s growth outperformed global gross domestic product growth by more than 40 percent in 2019, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council.”

Climate Depot comment: The New York Times persists in its climate storytelling and suggests people will face “tough decisions” and cope by “perhaps choosing” to stay home and huddle around the air conditioner.

NYT: “Tragic headlines and statistics are prompting hard looks at the nature of tourism: who benefits and who gets to participate. More people will find themselves confronting personal and increasingly tough decisions — and, like Ms. Barber, perhaps choosing a less appealing but more comfortable option: ‘We just all stayed home and huddled in a room with the air-conditioner on,’ she said.”

By: Marc Morano – Climate DepotAugust 5, 2023 6:04 PM

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/05/travel/summer-travel-climate-change.html

By Mac Schwerin

Aug. 5, 2023Updated 1:07 p.m. ET

You can’t escape the orange. That’s what travelers this summer have been reckoning with — swaths of tangerine, traffic cone and burnt sienna on maps indicating record high temperatures around the globe. Four concurrent heat domes from the southern United States to East Asia descended on millions — Phoenix residents enduring 31 days of 110-degree-plus temperatures. Italians in more than a dozen cities under extreme weather warnings. And in South Korea, at least 125 people were hospitalized for heat-related conditions at the World Scout Jamboree.

As the summer travel engine kicked into high gear this year, it wasn’t just the scorching heat affecting carefully laid plans. There were also fires, floods, tornadoes and hail storms. Eight inches of rainfall left parts of Vermont coping with catastrophic floods. Tens of thousands of people, including thousands of tourists, had to evacuate islands in Greece because of wildfires. (Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Wednesday offered a free weeklong stay in 2024 to those travelers affected — in spring or fall.) The popular music festival Awakenings canceled a date in the Netherlands because of concern over hail, lightning and thunderstorms.

Increasingly dangerous weather now hits classic summer destinations, with conditions growing more erratic, expensive and deadly. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the United States has experienced four climate disasters since May, each causing over a billion dollars in damages. The National Park Service estimates that more visitors have died of heat-related causes since June than do in an average year. The indirect toll is almost certainly higher: A recent study found that summer heat waves killed 61,000 people in Europe last year.

But even if the idea of a summer getaway remains culturally resilient, is it still practical? Where to go is certainly less obvious — you can’t hide from reality when reality is 100-degree seawater, or a raging wildfire.

For decades, science has confirmed that unabated climate change will cause more misery, more hardship and cost millions of lives in the years to come. We’re getting a taste of the results this summer. Our relationship to travel has reached a tipping point. What happens when we can’t just vacation through it?

Despite all the crises, global arrivals — the total number of tourists who cross a border — are projected to be up 30 percent from last year, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, a research division of the media company. The World Tourism Organization reports that travel to Europe is now at 90 percent of prepandemic levels.

And tourism is big business. The sector’s growth outperformed global gross domestic product growth by more than 40 percent in 2019, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council. That same year it employed 333 million people worldwide — equivalent to one in 10 jobs — and accounted for more than 10 percent of the global economy.

In the absence of national or unified support, planning may fall to corporations with pockets deep enough to marshal resources at scale. “Disney is sort of a poster child for a really good way to handle large numbers of people effectively,” said Daniel Scott, a professor of geography and environmental management at the University of Waterloo, in Canada. He suggested that the business model of globalized tourism may start to mimic the integrated resorts typified by Disney, where a single entity owns the infrastructure and controls visitor experiences with greater predictability.

It’s impossible to know where we go from here. But the cognitive dissonance of summer travel in a warming world is catching up to us. Tragic headlines and statistics are prompting hard looks at the nature of tourism: who benefits and who gets to participate. More people will find themselves confronting personal and increasingly tough decisions — and, like Ms. Barber, perhaps choosing a less appealing but more comfortable option: “We just all stayed home and huddled in a room with the air-conditioner on,” she said.

Lauren Sloss and Niki Kitsantonis contributed reporting.

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Related Links: 

2021 New York Times: ‘Summer Travel Is Back. Earth Can’t Handle It.’ – By Farhad Manjoo – “To cruise or not to cruise? To safari or stay put?…Tens of millions of jobs and trillions of dollars in economic activity are riding on its return to normality. But that would be a mistake. Tourism should not return to anything like its old, profligate normal. The pandemic has presented the world with an opportunity to reset how we tour this planet, and we should reach for it.”

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CNN commentary: ‘Vacations as we know it are over’ due to ‘climate change’ – ‘Holidays abroad need to be decoupled from flying’

CNN July 27, 2023 commentary by University College London Emeritus Prof. Bill McGuire: “Maybe we should take a lesson from the pandemic, when staycations were pretty much enforced…Vacations need to return to their roots, or at least move in that direction. In particular, holidays abroad need to be decoupled from flying, which means — as far as Europe is concerned — train, car or coach.

The familiarity and convenience of being close to home can bring its own contentment, comfort and well-being…What’s more, we’ll be able sunbathe in the warm glow of knowing we have slashed the size of our carbon footprint — making us part of the solution rather than the problem.”

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July 2023: ‘Is This the End of Summer Vacation?’ – By Andrew Moseman – “In a climate changed world, though, summer is swiftly being rebranded as a time of compounding calamityThe ocean is boiling, and as the world suffers through heat wave after heat wave — adding up to the hottest year on record — it is, quite simply, unpleasant to be outside…Given the increased risk of climate events with the potential to disrupt flights or highways, travelers will need a Plan B or C for how to spend summer vacation…Should we give up on the summer vacation fantasy? The question is not to be considered lightly.”

Flashback 2000: ‘Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past’ – ‘Children just aren’t going to know what snow is’ – UK Independent

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John Hultquist
August 6, 2023 7:49 pm

Seeing all the media outlets with similar stories it appears the editors colluded to make the idea unmissable.
When one thing fails, try something else.
Polar Bears, Penguins, Butterflies, Puffins, Cod, …, summer vacations.

four climate disasters since May ” Make that 5.
I had a climate disaster this year. Wind twisted and damaged the tops of onions. Some grew to only half the expected size. 🙂

Reply to  John Hultquist
August 6, 2023 9:03 pm

I had a climate disaster this year. “

Me too… I forgot to close the car window… and it rained !

August 6, 2023 11:00 pm

Can’t wait to go celeb spotting in the future hotspots of Blackpool and Morecambe – if we’re allowed to travel that fae

Ed Zuiderwijk
August 7, 2023 1:44 am

Net Zero:

No car, except for the very rich.
No flying, except for the very rich.
No meat, except for the very rich.
No heating in winter, except for the very rich.
No standard of living worth mentioning, except for the very rich.

The urban elites may not think they are the new aristocracy, but they will find out when the people starts erecting guillotines.

Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
August 7, 2023 3:15 am

The elites are too arrogant to learn from history. Therefore they repeat it. Think Magna Carta and the French Revolution.

Richard Page
Reply to  Tim Gorman
August 7, 2023 11:35 am

Ah I was thinking of the defenestrations of Prague.

old cocky
Reply to  Tim Gorman
August 7, 2023 3:03 pm

The Magna Carta actually was organised by the aristocracy 🙂

Reply to  old cocky
August 8, 2023 4:48 am

Where is the aristocracy today? Much of the MC was focused on the common man, even if it was pushed by the aristocracy. You simply don’t see that today.

old cocky
Reply to  Tim Gorman
August 8, 2023 3:05 pm

The first version, which King John grudgingly signed, was primarily for the rights of the Barons. I’m not sure that serfs even counted as people at that stage.

old cocky
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
August 7, 2023 8:51 pm

No phone, no lights, no motor car,
Not a single luxury

Reply to  old cocky
August 8, 2023 5:35 am

no phone, no pool, no pets – it’s from a song but I can’t quite remember which one.

old cocky
Reply to  Tim Gorman
August 8, 2023 2:44 pm

The mate was a mighty sailin’ lad,
The Skipper brave and sure,
Five passengers set sail that day,
For a three hour tour,
A three hour tour.

Reply to  old cocky
August 8, 2023 2:49 pm

no phone no pool no pets

Roger Miller : King of the Road

old cocky
Reply to  Tim Gorman
August 8, 2023 3:08 pm

Room for rent
Fifty cents.

I was thinking of the SS Minnow

ResourceGuy
August 7, 2023 12:14 pm

Welcome to AI match-the-words climate story writing. Next up is Barbie, back to school, bud light and climate change mashup.

August 7, 2023 2:15 pm

Let just guess what the folks lamenting summer vacations are a thing of the past are actually doing with their summer time off. Yes you guessed it and they are probably doing it first class and often on the dime of the taxpayer. And those with the the loudest voices are flying private, occupying only the finest of beaches, and consuming 5 star dishes and wines.

August 8, 2023 10:10 am

NOAA Average Temperature Anomaly data across the Contiguous U.S. from Jan 2005 through July 2023 shows how stupid and incompetent the New York Times article is and how alarmist propaganda is devoid of any connection to actually measured data.

Screenshot 2023-08-08 at 9.55.03 AM.jpeg
Duane
August 9, 2023 3:30 am

Apparently the New York Times staff and editors are unaware of one of the most iconic Hollywood film images of all time, Marilyn Monroe standing on a street air grate in New York City, with her dress blowing up around her legs, trying to cool off in the summer. This film, “Seven Year Itch” (1955), was about how everybody who didn’t have to work and could afford it left NYC in the heat of summer to go out to wherever it was they vacationed (the beach, or the mountains) to cool off because of the otherwise oppressive summer heat in the City.

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Gee, who’d a thunk it? It gets hot in the summers! Even in the olden days!