The Climate Costs of Extreme Day Trips

The Climate Costs of Extreme Day Trips
Travel

When a BBC News article last month featured a mother and her 6-year-old son taking a day trip to Norway for their 40th flight together, it went viral and lit up LinkedIn.

Climate advocates and sustainability professionals took issue with the gratuitous flight.

It’s not just the carbon. A typical short-haul return flight from the UK to another European destination emits around 221 kilograms of CO2 per passenger, the same whether you stay one day or seven, according to sustainability intelligence firm Thrust Carbon.

But a standard traveler on holiday spreads that carbon cost across more than 7 nights, and contributes to the destination’s economy. The day tripper burns through the same carbon budget in a few hours and offers less benefit to local businesses.

According to data from Kayak, nearly 66% of UK travelers plan to take several shorter trips in 2026, adding that searches for one- to four-day trips have increased 8% in a single year.

View original source here

Articles You May Like

Mike Ness Discusses His Journey For Social Distortion’s New Album
Lufthansa Tightens Grip on ITA Airways With Majority Stake Swoop
Literary Hub » What Our Ideas About Ugliness Reveal About Our Anxieties Surrounding Gender
Where Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni’s Career’s Stand in the Aftermath
Fat Dog come back swinging with ‘80s banger new single ‘Go Fuck Urself’