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Monday, February 17, 2020

Research reveals how ski tourism operators can protect profits in the face of climate change



Research reveals how ski tourism operators can protect profits in the face of climate change

Credit: Etaphop photo/Shutterstock.com


Research by Cass Business School academics has presented a methodology for identifying how winter tourism operators can protect themselves against the risk of decreasing visitor numbers to ski destinations and lost revenues.

Due to the effects of climate change, ski tourism in the Alps is becoming endangered by decreasing levels of snow caused by rising .


Focusing on the use of derivatives as a means of revenue protection, the study uses a series of models to design useful weather derivatives payoff—where operators 'sell' risk to for a premium—by predicting visitor numbers and revenues in a given month. The methodology is based on more than 50 years' worth of snowfall and temperature data recorded at a resort in Austria.


Highlight findings from the report include:


  • Visitor numbers to resorts vary considerably within the ski season itself, depending on snow depth and temperature.
  • As snow depth decreases, companies become more heavily reliant on the traditionally busier days—such as Christmas Day and other public holidays, and weekends—to provide the necessary sustainable footfall.
  • Greater depths of snow on the first day of a ski season reduce the dependence of these popular days for visitors to provide revenues—showing that snowfall and temperature consistency is important out of season as well as in it.
  • Due to the variation of visitor numbers, financial markets and winter tourism operators should base weather derivative contracts on historical average monthly revenues—fluctuating strike prices every month to form different contracts for each.
  • On the other hand, a single contract based on cumulative snow fall at the season end is highly risky for all parties and attracts the highest profit and loss variance out of all options that were tested.

Figures from the study included 20,774 historic daily weather observations of Sonnblick, Austria, from the European Climate Assessment (ECA), with the assumption that a ski season runs annually from 1st December through to 15th April.


A '100-day' rule is used as a critical threshold for visitor numbers, with the study considering 30cm of snow for at least 100 days during the winter season as a minimum requirement for testing reliability of ski operations.


Co-author Dr. Laura Ballotta, Reader in Financial Mathematics at Cass Business School, said the report's findings should encourage ski tourism companies to purchase weather derivatives and think more strategically about the risk involved:


"Treatment of premises through artificial 'snowmaking' and landscaping is costly and could release potentially harmful additives into the environment. Diversifying activities beyond traditional ski and snow sports activities can also have expensive investment costs, so we believe that accessing financial markets for weather derivatives and sharing risk is the most viable option.


"By using our methodology based on more than 50 years' worth of snowfall and temperature data, companies can optimise weather derivative contracts to protect themselves from financial ruin if levels are insufficient."


'Risk Management of climate impact for tourism operators: An empirical analysis on ski resorts' by Laura Ballotta, Gianluca Fusai, Ioannis Kyriakou, Nikos C. Papapostolou and Panos K. Pouliasis is published in Tourism Management.




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More information:
Laura Ballotta et al. Risk management of climate impact for tourism operators: An empirical analysis on ski resorts, Tourism Management (2019). DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2019.104011








Citation:
Research reveals how ski tourism operators can protect profits in the face of climate change (2020, February 17)
retrieved 17 February 2020
from https://phys.org/news/2020-02-reveals-tourism-profits-climate.html



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