Abstract

This paper integrates a low-carbon tourism supply chain consisting of a low-carbon tourist attraction (LTA) providing a low-carbon service and an online travel agency (OTA) responsible for big data marketing. Consumers may also encounter sudden crisis events that occur in the tourist attraction during their visit, and the occurrence of crisis events can damage the low-carbon goodwill of the tourist attraction to the detriment of the sustainable development of the supply chain. Therefore, this paper aims to investigate how tourism firms can develop dynamic strategies in the pre-crisis environment if they envision the occurrence of a crisis event and how crisis events affect interfirm cooperation. This paper uses stochastic jump processes to portray the dynamic evolution of low-carbon goodwill in the context of crisis events and introduces the methods of the differential game and Bellman’s continuous dynamic programming theory to study the sustainable operations of low-carbon tourism supply chains. Our findings provide important managerial insights for enterprises in the tourism supply chain and suggest that they need to not only become aware of the tourist attraction crisis events, but also, more importantly, they need to adjust their appropriate input strategies based on the degree of anticipation of the crisis.

Highlights

  • Data released by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) in January 2019 showed that the number of world tourism has reached 1.4 billion in 2018.in 2010, the UNWTO predicted that the number of world tourism would reach1.4 billion in 2020

  • Consumers can encounter sudden crisis events that occur in the tourist attraction during their visit, such as natural accidents, accidents caused by vehicles or recreational equipment and overcrowding or stampede events caused by exceeding the maximum capacity of the scenic spot

  • This paper considers a low-carbon tourism supply chain consisting of a low-carbon tourist attraction (LTA) and an online travel agency (OTA), in which the LTA is responsible for the low-carbon service level and the OTA is in charge of big data marketing

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Summary

Introduction

Data released by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) in January 2019 showed that the number of world tourism has reached 1.4 billion in 2018.in 2010, the UNWTO predicted that the number of world tourism would reach1.4 billion in 2020. The rapid development of tourism has led to excessive greenhouse gas emissions, which in turn has led to the destruction of the natural environment in tourist attractions [1,2,3]. It makes the implementation of energy saving and emission reduction of low-carbon tourism concept the consensus among tourism enterprises, consumers and the government to reduce carbon emissions in tourism activities and improve the sustainable development of tourism enterprises [4,5,6].

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