Abstract

Climate change threatens winter tourism in the Alps severely, and ski resorts are struggling to cope under uncertain climate change. We aim to identify under what conditions physical and economic tipping points for ski resorts may occur under changing climate in six Swiss ski resorts representing low, medium, and high elevation in the Alps. We use exploratory modeling (EMA) to assess climate change impacts on ski resorts under a range of futures adaptation options: (1) snowmaking and (2) diversifying the ski resorts' activities throughout the year. High-resolution climate projections (CH2018) were used to represent climate uncertainty. To improve the coverage of the uncertainty space and account for the climate models' intra-annual variability, we produced new climate realizations using resampling techniques. We demonstrate the importance of five factors, namely climate scenarios (RCPs), intra-annual climate variability, snow processes model, and two adaptation options, in ski resorts survival under a wide range of future scenarios. In six ski resorts, strong but highly variable decreases in the future number of days with good snow conditions for skiing (GSD) are projected. However, despite the different characteristics of the resorts, responses are similar and a shrunk of up to 31, 50, and 62 days in skiing season (Dec-April) is projected for the near-future (2020–2050), mid-future (2050–2080), and far-future (2070–2100), respectively. Similarly, in all cases, the number of days with good conditions for snowmaking (GDSM) will reduce up to 30, 50, and 74 days in the skiing season in the near-, mid-, and far-future horizons, respectively. We indicate that all ski resorts will face a reduction of up to 13%, 33%, and 51% of their reference period (1981–2010) revenue from winter skiing activities in the near-, mid-, and far-future horizons. Based on the outcomes of the EMA, we identify Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (DAPP) and determine the adaptation options that ski resorts could implement to avoid tipping points in the future. We highlight the advantages of adaptive planning in a first of its kind application of DMDU techniques to winter tourism. We specify the possible adaptation options ranging from "low revenue diversification and moderate snowmaking" to "high revenue diversification and large snowmaking" and demonstrate when an adaptation action fails and a change to a new plan is needed. By the end of the century, we show that only ski resorts with ski lines above 1800–2000 m elevation will survive regardless of the climate scenarios. Our approach to decision-making is highly flexible and can easily be extended to other ski resorts and account for additional adaptation options.

Highlights

  • The collapse of winter sport tourism due to climate change has been recently identified as a socio-economic tipping point, alongside farm­ land abandonment and sea-level rise induced migration

  • We identify the most relevant features to include in a decision-making model for ski resorts (Figs. 4 and S4), and we present our scenario discovery assess­ ment results that demonstrate the sensitivity of the outcome metrics (M1-M3) to the input parameters (X1-X7 and L1-L2) (Figs. 5 and S5− S14)

  • We show under which adaptation options the ski resorts do not confront more tipping points in the future than the reference period (Fig. 6)

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Summary

Introduction

The collapse of winter sport tourism due to climate change has been recently identified as a socio-economic tipping point, alongside farm­ land abandonment and sea-level rise induced migration (van Ginkel et al, 2020). In this context, the term "tipping point" refers to a critical threshold which a system abruptly switches to a fundamentally different state (Ashwin et al, 2012; Lenton et al, 2008). By analyzing snow reliability of 175 ski resorts in France (Alps and Pyrenees), Spain, and Andorra under past and future conditions using the snowpack model (Spandre et al, 2016) and climate projections from the EURO-CORDEX dataset (Verfaillie et al, 2018, 2017), Spandre et al (2019a, 2019b) projected no snow-reliable ski resorts would exist in the French Alps and the Pyrenees at the end of the century (2080–2100)

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