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A comprehensive framework for comparing water use intensity across different tourist types

journal contribution
posted on 2015-01-01, 00:00 authored by Michalis HadjikakouMichalis Hadjikakou, G Miller, J Chenoweth, A Druckman, C Zoumides
Tourism products vary in their direct and indirect (supply chain) water use, as well as in their economic contribution. Hence, water-scarce destinations require a method to estimate and compare water use intensity (water use in relation to economic output) for different kinds of tourist products in order to optimise their tourism offering. The present study develops an original framework that integrates segmentation with an environmentally extended input–output (EEIO) framework based on detailed tourism expenditure data and tourism satellite accounts (TSAs) in order to quantify the total (direct and indirect) economic impact and water use for multiple tourism segments. To demonstrate the rigour of the methodology, it is applied to the eastern Mediterranean island of Cyprus. The results show that cheaper forms of tourism tend to have a significantly lower total water use and, depending on the economic impact indicator of interest, may have above-average economic contribution per unit of expenditure. The proposed framework provides a significant step towards achieving sustainable water use through destination-specific estimates of water use intensity which take into consideration segment-specific attributes. It is envisaged that this could eventually lead to customised interventions for diverse tourism market segments.

History

Journal

Journal of sustainable tourism

Volume

23

Issue

10

Pagination

1445 - 1467

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

ISSN

0966-9582

eISSN

1747-7646

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Taylor & Francis