Detection of Empirical Relationships between the NOA and International Tourism Demand to the Balearic Islands

Tourism is a climate-dependent industry, as a lot of tourist activities heavily rely on specific weather conditions. Therefore, it seems also reasonable to consider meteorological factors as significant determinants of tourism demand; however, relatively little systematic research has been carried o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giráldez, M. Soledad Otero, Álvarez-Díaz, Marcos, Gómez, Manuel González
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Departamento de Economia, Gestão, Engenharia Industrial e Turismo - Universidade de Aveiro 2018
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Online Access:http://revistas.ua.pt/index.php/rtd/article/view/10204
Description
Summary:Tourism is a climate-dependent industry, as a lot of tourist activities heavily rely on specific weather conditions. Therefore, it seems also reasonable to consider meteorological factors as significant determinants of tourism demand; however, relatively little systematic research has been carried out. The most widely-used meteorological variable in determining tourism is temperature. Other variables are also used such as rainfall, wet days, cloud cover, humidity, sunshine and wind speed. One potential key variable to explain Tourism could be the NAO (the North Atlantic Oscillation).The NAO has a significant impact on the meteorological conditions (temperature, storms, precipitations, wind speed, among others) observed predominantly in the Atlantic zone and the Mediterranean region. The phenomenon is formally defined as an anomalous difference in the atmospheric pressure between the subtropical high-pressure belt, around the latitudes of 35º- 40º in the Northern Hemisphere and centered near the Azores, and the subpolar low-pressure belt, centered over Iceland.