An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta

Tourism is one of Indonesia’s largest economic sectors contributing significantly to the republic’s current development . However, there is a price to pay for developing tourism, namely, the increased generation of CO2 produced by touris and tourism activities which can lead to climate change. To...

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Main Authors: Saputra, Erlis, Sadali, Mohammad Isnaini, Jauhari, Agung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, UKM,Bangi 2013
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/6508/1/3.geografia-july_2013-erlis-edam1.pdf
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Institution: Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my-ukm.journal.65082016-12-14T06:41:22Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/6508/ An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta Saputra, Erlis Sadali, Mohammad Isnaini Jauhari, Agung Tourism is one of Indonesia’s largest economic sectors contributing significantly to the republic’s current development . However, there is a price to pay for developing tourism, namely, the increased generation of CO2 produced by touris and tourism activities which can lead to climate change. To gauge the extent to which this is happening in the country a field study was conducted in D.I. Yogyakarta to determine the amount of carbon produced by individual tourists through tourism activities, and to map the amount of carbon produced by tourists at a tourist destination. The results showed that a) of the total amount of 1,218,416.05 kg of CO2 produced by tourists in the Province of Yogyakarta about 45 percent or 542,971.48 kg CO2 was produced by foreign tourists as compared to 55 percent or 675,444.57 kg CO2 produced by domestic tourists; b) accommodation air conditioning was the biggest carbon contributor with respect to domestic tourists; c) at 5,728.17 kg of CO2 domestic tourists dominated the amount of transportation carbon produced during their stay in D.I. Yogyakarta; and d) the greatest amount of carbon, viz. 236,648.7 kg or 20% of the total CO2 generated by tourists was at the heritage tourism sites. Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, UKM,Bangi 2013 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/6508/1/3.geografia-july_2013-erlis-edam1.pdf Saputra, Erlis and Sadali, Mohammad Isnaini and Jauhari, Agung (2013) An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta. Geografia : Malaysian Journal of Society and Space, 9 (3). pp. 24-37. ISSN 2180-2491 http://www.ukm.my/geografia/v2/index.php?
institution Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
building Perpustakaan Tun Sri Lanang Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
content_source UKM Journal Article Repository
url_provider http://journalarticle.ukm.my/
language English
description Tourism is one of Indonesia’s largest economic sectors contributing significantly to the republic’s current development . However, there is a price to pay for developing tourism, namely, the increased generation of CO2 produced by touris and tourism activities which can lead to climate change. To gauge the extent to which this is happening in the country a field study was conducted in D.I. Yogyakarta to determine the amount of carbon produced by individual tourists through tourism activities, and to map the amount of carbon produced by tourists at a tourist destination. The results showed that a) of the total amount of 1,218,416.05 kg of CO2 produced by tourists in the Province of Yogyakarta about 45 percent or 542,971.48 kg CO2 was produced by foreign tourists as compared to 55 percent or 675,444.57 kg CO2 produced by domestic tourists; b) accommodation air conditioning was the biggest carbon contributor with respect to domestic tourists; c) at 5,728.17 kg of CO2 domestic tourists dominated the amount of transportation carbon produced during their stay in D.I. Yogyakarta; and d) the greatest amount of carbon, viz. 236,648.7 kg or 20% of the total CO2 generated by tourists was at the heritage tourism sites.
format Article
author Saputra, Erlis
Sadali, Mohammad Isnaini
Jauhari, Agung
spellingShingle Saputra, Erlis
Sadali, Mohammad Isnaini
Jauhari, Agung
An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta
author_facet Saputra, Erlis
Sadali, Mohammad Isnaini
Jauhari, Agung
author_sort Saputra, Erlis
title An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta
title_short An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta
title_full An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta
title_fullStr An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of tourist carbon footprint in Indonesia – The case of D.I. Yogyakarta
title_sort analysis of tourist carbon footprint in indonesia – the case of d.i. yogyakarta
publisher Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, UKM,Bangi
publishDate 2013
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/6508/1/3.geografia-july_2013-erlis-edam1.pdf
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/6508/
http://www.ukm.my/geografia/v2/index.php?
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