ADAPTATION STRATEGY TO SEA LEVEL RISE FOR COASTAL AND MARINE TOURISM DESTINATIONS IN TELUK PANDAN DISTRICT, PESAWARAN REGENCY
Changes in sea level are a direct impact of climate change and affect various economic sectors, including the tourism sector. Previous studies have shown that with a sea level rise of 0.5-1 meter, coastal areas and small islands can lose land so that they can experience economic losses, especi...
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Theses |
Language: | Indonesia |
Online Access: | https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/67877 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Institution: | Institut Teknologi Bandung |
Language: | Indonesia |
Summary: | Changes in sea level are a direct impact of climate change and affect various
economic sectors, including the tourism sector. Previous studies have shown that
with a sea level rise of 0.5-1 meter, coastal areas and small islands can lose land
so that they can experience economic losses, especially in areas that rely on tourism
due to the loss of coastal and recreational tourism areas. In Indonesia, an increase
in sea level reaching 0.7-1.2 cm/year has a high risk for the tourism sector, mainly
coastal and marine tourism. Pesawaran Regency, especially in Teluk Pandan
District, is one area that has various tourist attractions consisting of coastal areas
and small islands, which are also threatened due to sea level rise. In dealing with
the impact of sea level rise, appropriate adaptation strategies are needed so that
various stakeholders in coastal and marine tourism destinations can adapt to
changes and potential damage, overcome the consequences, and take advantage of
opportunities from the phenomenon of sea level rise. Several studies of climate
change adaptation strategies are currently focusing on other sectors such as the
agricultural sector, infrastructure, health, and others, some of them with other
climate change threats such as changes in rainfall that cause floods or droughts.
However, not many studies show various choices of climate change adaptation
strategies, primarily due to the impact of sea level rise and tourism as an affected
sector. For this reason, this study aims to formulate an adaptation strategy for the
impact of sea level rise on 7 coastal and marine tourism destinations consisting of
3 beach destinations, 3 small island destinations and 1 mangrove forest destination.
In this study, the method of collecting data was interviews with nine sources and a
study of various documents and statistical data. Qualitative descriptive analysis
and risk analysis taking into account the components of hazard, vulnerability, and
exposure, were used in this study. Adaptation strategies are formulated by
identifying impacts, calculating risks, and considering the resilience framework of
tourist destinations. This study found that the impact of sea level rise identified in
seven tourist destinations was in the form of tidal flood and abrasion hazards,
which caused direct and indirect impacts in the form of infrastructure damage,
economic losses to environmental damage. The risk calculation results through the
components of hazard, vulnerability, and exposure show that there are 2 tourist
destinations with high risk and 5 with moderate risk. This is due to the high threat,
exposure, and sensitivity level but is not matched by adaptive capacity. The regional policy direction of Pesawaran Regency to concentrate tourism development in
Teluk Pandan District also strengthens the importance of efforts to adapt to the
impact of sea level rise on the tourism sector. Thus, 19 adaptation strategies have
been formulated for the government, 17 adaptation strategies for tourism
destination managers, 9 adaptation strategies for the community and 5 adaptation
strategies through technological innovation. These strategies include planning for
disaster management, environmental management, diversifying employment and
tourism products, building adaptive infrastructure, and increasing public
awareness. This study is helpful as input and recommendations for various parties
in the context of adaptation and mitigation of disasters caused by the impacts of
climate change, especially sea level rise in tourist destinations.
|
---|