期货合约
气候变化
自然资源经济学
环境科学
接见者模式
业务
地理
农业经济学
经济
财务
生态学
计算机科学
生物
程序设计语言
作者
Daniel Scott,Robert Steiger,Michelle Rutty,Natalie Knowles,Brooklyn Rushton
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.tmp.2021.100875
摘要
Climate change is an evolving business reality in the ski industry, with recent trends toward shorter ski seasons and emerging climate risk disclosure requirements. Climate change impacts under low- to high-emission futures are examined at 99 ski areas in the American Midwest market with snowmaking. Mid-century season losses range from −25% in a low-emission scenario (SSP245), to −29% under moderate-emissions (SSP370), and − 38% with high-emissions (SSP585). Depending on demand response, utilization intensity could increase between 23 and 40% from the current 4.8 skiers/per acre-day with implications for crowding and visitor experience at ski areas still in operation. Highlighting the importance of low-emission futures, by late-century, transformational impacts in high-emission scenarios would largely eliminate this regional market. The results are compared with previous studies that neglected snowmaking as a climate risk management strategy and thereby substantially overestimated the impact of mid-century and low-emission scenarios.
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