A journey into the future | The Press

An article on the future of travel published 40 or 50 years ago would have speculated on newly accessible destinations. Today, when those who have the means are a plane flight (or two) away from most countries in the world, it is the loss of these gains that is envisaged. How and where will we travel in the future?




PHOTO PHILIPPE DESMAZES, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ARCHIVES

The Mont Blanc glacier melts 5 to 8 meters per year.

See, before it’s too late

Devastating fires in Hawaii and British Columbia, extreme heat in Europe: climatic hazards stood in the way of many travelers this summer. As climate change accelerates, scientists believe these events will occur more regularly. But rather than dampening the enthusiasm of travelers, these threats could, in the short term, have the opposite effect.

Having become a symbol of the consequences of global warming in France, the Montenvers-Mer-de-glace glacier attracts visitors every year who come to witness its disappearance. This glacier in the Mont Blanc massif melts 5 to 8 meters per year.


PHOTO LUCAS JACKSON, REUTERS ARCHIVES

The great coral barrier

The Sea of ​​Ice, like the Great Barrier Reef, Antarctica, Venice and even Churchill, Manitoba, known for its polar bears, attract fans of what researchers call “last chance tourism”, which consists of going to observe ecosystems threatened with disappearing in the medium term. Even if this phenomenon is still marginal, its acceleration is “one of the easiest predictions to establish”, according to the French geographer Rémy Knafou, author of the essay Reinventing tourism – Putting an end to the hypocrisies of sustainable tourismpublished in Quebec last June.

“If there is not a minimum of agreement at the international level and strong symbolic messages to show that it is necessary to enter a new phase in our history, both in our relationship to the Earth and in our tourist history, there is unfortunately almost every chance of thinking that this last-chance tourism will accelerate”, affirms the professor emeritus of the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, who advocates, in his essay, the sanctuary of Antarctica.


PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

In Tignes, the summer ice cream parlor was forced to close a month early last year.

Finished skiing?

Skiing in the Alps, one of Rémy Knafou’s research areas, is already under threat, with several low-altitude ski resorts having been dismantled.

We can clearly see that outside of the high resorts, by the middle of the century, it will be difficult to ski [dans les Alpes], even with artificial snow. So, we are starting to envisage the disappearance of tourist places.

Rémy Knafou, geographer and author

In Quebec, the reduction in cold windows and the increase in mild spells will also affect the practice of alpine skiing in the south of the province. An economic analysis carried out by Ouranos in 2019 notes that “in the absence of adaptation, the opening, the duration of the season and the percentage of the ski area open will be affected”. “I don’t think there will be the disappearance of certain activities, but they will be further weakened,” believes Chantal Quintin, specialist in research and knowledge transfer at Ouranos, an organization that supports the tourism industry in adaptation. to climate change.

Thus, ski resorts will have to adapt, not only by relying on artificial snow, but by diversifying their offer over four seasons, underlines Mme Quintin, recalling that sustainable tourism must take into account current and future economic, social and environmental impacts.


PHOTO EMILIO MORENATTI, ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES

A dry dock in Barcelona, ​​Spain, last spring

Restrictions, quotas or taxes

To protect against overtourism, some countries could restrict the number of visitors authorized to enter their territory, impose a tourist tax, like Bhutan, or a compulsory reservation with entry fee, as planned in Venice.

In a context of diminishing natural and energy resources, will we decide to conserve them for local communities? asks Pascale Marcotte who, at the time of the interview, was a full professor in the geography department at Laval University and director of the certificate in sustainable tourism. “Last year we saw droughts in France, this year in Spain. When we no longer have water for our community, are we happy to see visitors arriving? »


PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Beach nourishment work carried out on the historic site of La Grave, in the Magdalen Islands, before the passage of the storm Fiona last September

Fragile Magdalen Islands

More abundant spring floods, episodes of intense heat in summer, extreme rains in the fall: for the Quebec tourism industry, the challenges will vary depending on the region and the seasons, explains Chantal Quintin. Among the most affected tourist areas are the coastal municipalities of eastern Quebec as well as the Îles-de-la-Madeleine. Frequented in the summer by many Quebecers, who have found somewhere else to call home, the coasts of this mythical archipelago have retreated by 55 centimeters per year on average from 2005 to 2020. Several mitigation measures have been put in place, such as the riprap, sand refills, as well as raising visitors’ awareness of the fragility of the coastline.


PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Dominic Lapointe, social science researcher

Professor in the department of urban and tourism studies at the University of Quebec in Montreal, Dominic Lapointe guides stakeholders in the Madelinian tourism industry in their adaptation. For this social science researcher, it is a “transformation of the outlook” and the close relationship with the sea that is to be expected for visitors. Anyone who regularly visits the archipelago cites as an example the beach replenishment work carried out on the historic site of La Grave which changes the appearance of the landscape.

It is the tourist imagination itself linked to the Saint-Laurent which must be reviewed, he adds, since staying by the sea may no longer be possible. “This attraction to the water will not disappear, but it will change,” he predicts, possibly leading to greater accessibility to the coastline which will no longer be so subject to private interests.


PHOTO DAVID BOILY, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

When will high-speed trains come to Canada?

Local trips

If the pandemic has allowed Quebecers to discover their province, this trend could take root, according to the experts consulted, in particular because the cost of travel could continue to increase. “As consumers, we will perhaps realize that the price we were paying until now was not a fair price, in the sense that it did not take externalities into account,” says Pascale Marcotte.

In the future, some could be forced to give up flying, either for economic reasons, or because a system of carbon quotas will have been established, or, like Rémy Knafou, by personal convictions.

Climate change, coupled with the scarcity of fossil fuels and geopolitical considerations, leads the author to think about a possible deglobalization of tourism.

That said, although he writes that because it hasn’t always existed, tourism could disappear, the professor doesn’t really believe that this will happen. “Tourism is part of our way of life and even the populations of the world who do not have access to it have the hope of accessing it one day. We have to live with tourism, but we have to adapt it. »

Adapting it also means moving towards sustainable mobility and public transport. In this regard, Quebec and North America are lagging far behind, while in Europe we are witnessing a return to train travel, particularly with the start of several cross-border night line projects. Will the high-speed train linking Montreal to Toronto arrive before carbon-free long-haul planes? The bets have been made.

Learn more

  • 168
    Number of ski resorts which have ceased their activities in France since 1951

    source: Works of geographer Pierre-Alexandre Métral, cited by the Assembly of Departments of France

    7 to 10 days
    In the Eastern Townships, the start of the ski season will be delayed by approximately 7 to 10 days by 2050 compared to 2020. Over the total duration of the season, we will observe a reduction of 10 to 20 days of activity.

    source: Economic analysis of climate change adaptation measures applied to the alpine skiing sector in Quebec, Ouranos, 2019


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