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Keywords = heat-escape tourism

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23 pages, 8597 KiB  
Review
Research Progress on the Evaluation of Tourism Climate Comfort and Its Application in China: A Bibliometrics-Based Review
by Xin Huang, Yi Hui, Junkai Chen, Zhixuan Huang, Ximei Li and Xitian Yang
Atmosphere 2025, 16(6), 714; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16060714 - 13 Jun 2025
Viewed by 606
Abstract
The evaluation of tourism climate comfort is a systematic assessment of the climate conditions of tourist destinations. It is of great significance for improving the tourism experience, promoting the sustainable development of the tourism industry, and protecting the natural environment. In this study, [...] Read more.
The evaluation of tourism climate comfort is a systematic assessment of the climate conditions of tourist destinations. It is of great significance for improving the tourism experience, promoting the sustainable development of the tourism industry, and protecting the natural environment. In this study, the CiteSpace software was used to conduct a bibliometrics analysis of the study on tourism climate comfort in China, and the conceptual framework of this study was established based on the bibliometrics results. In the conceptual framework, this study firstly summarized eight indicators widely used in the current evaluation of tourism climate comfort. Secondly, four key technical means in the evaluation process were summarized, including geographic information system, analytic hierarchy process, fuzzy comprehensive evaluation, and cluster analysis. And three calculation methods of tourism climate comfort period were summarized, namely number of days with comfortable climate, five-day moving average method, and probability of climate-suitable days. Subsequently, the main application areas of tourism climate comfort evaluation were introduced: (1) exploration of the relationship between climate comfort and tourism activities (i.e., heat/cold-escape tourism, ice-snow tourism, outdoor rafting, coastal tourism, and other types of tourism activities); (2) exploration of the relationship between climate comfort and tourist flow; (3) the response of climate comfort to climate change; and (4) tourism climate regionalization. Finally, the main problems of current research and future development directions were proposed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Tourism and Climate Change in Asia: Challenges and Opportunities)
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14 pages, 2004 KiB  
Article
High Temperatures and Tourism: Findings from China
by Dandan Yu, Shan Li, Ning (Chris) Chen, Michael Hall and Zhongyang Guo
Sustainability 2023, 15(19), 14138; https://doi.org/10.3390/su151914138 - 25 Sep 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 3464
Abstract
Climate change and its fluctuations exert significant impacts on the tourism industry, particularly through the influence of high temperatures as typical meteorological and climatic factors on tourists’ travel intentions, spatial behavior preferences, and destination choices. This study employs China as a case study [...] Read more.
Climate change and its fluctuations exert significant impacts on the tourism industry, particularly through the influence of high temperatures as typical meteorological and climatic factors on tourists’ travel intentions, spatial behavior preferences, and destination choices. This study employs China as a case study to investigate the effects of high-temperature weather on tourism and tourist travel. By analyzing news reports, conducting observations, and examining statistics, an exploratory analysis of tourism in China under high-temperature scenarios reveals several noteworthy findings. Firstly, tourists seeking relief from the summer heat exhibit a preference for short-distance trips and destinations rich in natural resources. Secondly, heat-escape tourism products have gradually transformed over time, evolving from mountain heat escapes in the 1980s to waterfront vacations in the 1990s, artificial water leisure in the 2000s, and ultimately culminating in the development of heat-escape cities in the 2010s. Additionally, this study examines interregional disparities in summer tourism climate amenity across China using the Holiday Climate Index (HCI), the Tourism Climate Index (TCI), and daily data from 775 weather stations. It also provides a summary of the spatiotemporal evolution from 1961 to 2020 within the context of climate change, revealing intriguing findings. Moreover, a case study of Shanghai Disneyland demonstrates the greater significance of the holiday system compared to temperature constraints. This study aims to examine the interaction between high temperatures and China’s tourism in the context of climate change, providing a scientific foundation for government agencies and tourism enterprises to develop effective policies and plans. Full article
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