
Agir pour le Climat
UN Climate Change COP29 Thematic Day on Tourism
The inclusion of “Climate Action in Tourism” in the UN Climate Change COP29 Action Agenda for the first time, under the Presidency of Azerbaijan, represents a milestone for an important economic sector such as tourism.

Le secteur du tourisme est à la fois très vulnérable aux changements climatiques et une source d’émissions de gaz à effet de serre, l’une des causes du réchauffement planétaire. Accélérer l’action climatique dans le tourisme est donc de la plus haute importance pour la résilience du secteur. L’action climatique recouvre les efforts de mesure et de réduction des émissions de gaz à effet de serre et le renforcement de la capacité d’adaptation aux impacts d’origine climatique1.
Un consensus est en train de se dégager, parmi les acteurs du tourisme, autour de l’idée que la résilience future du tourisme dépendra de la capacité du secteur à s’engager sur la voie d’une exploitation sobre en carbone et à réduire les émissions de 50 % d’ici 2030
RELATED ACTIVITIES
The Glasgow Declaration: A Commitment to a Decade of Climate Action in Tourism
The Glasgow Declaration aims to act as a catalyst for increased urgency about the need to accelerate climate action in tourism and to secure strong actions and commitment.
The signatories of the Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism are committing to act now and accelerate climate action to support the global goals of cutting emissions by at least a half over the next decade and reach Net Zero emissions as soon as possible before 2050. Signatories of the Glasgow Declaration are developing climate plans aligned with 5 pathways: measure, decarbonize, regenerate, collaborate, finance, and reporting progress on an annual basis.
UN Tourism outlined the collective progress with the first Glasgow Declaration Implementation Report (2023).The Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism Implementation Report 2023 presents the results of a systematic review of all progress updates received from signatories during the first reporting exercise conducted between January and June 2023 (over 400 updates), which in many cases include the submission of a Climate Action Plan. The report represents a first-of-its-kind picture of the rapidly developing engagement of the tourism sector with the challenges of climate action.
