Global economic impact of scuba dive tourism

Author:

Schuhbauer Anna1,Favoretto Fabio2ORCID,Wang Terrance3ORCID,Aburto-Oropeza Octavio4ORCID,Sala Enric5ORCID,Millage Katherine6,Cabral Reniel7ORCID,Sumaila U. Rashid8ORCID,Lucrezi Serena9,Hsu Astrid10,Tighsazzadeh Mohammad Nasir11,Cruz Marisol Plascencia de la12,Cisneros-Montemayor Andrés11

Affiliation:

1. University of British Columbia

2. Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego

3. University of Washington

4. Scripps Institute of Oceanography

5. National Geographic Society

6. University of California, Santa Barbara

7. James Cook University

8. The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

9. North-West University

10. The Walt Disney Company

11. Simon Fraser University

12. Centro para la Biodiversidad Marina y la Conservacion

Abstract

Abstract Ecotourism presents an opportunity to provide equitable benefits to local communities; serve as a platform for environmental education; and can be leveraged to support conservation initiatives, shifting away from traditional mass tourism and other forms of unsustainable marine use. Marine ecotourism sectors, such as scuba diving, whale and shark watching are increasingly important for local economies but their aggregate benefits are often overlooked in global ocean economy discussions. Here, we present a first estimation of the global economic value of scuba diving, including 11,500 identified scuba dive operators across the world. Based on an online operator survey, we estimate global annual revenue (direct diving expenditure in 2019) at between 0.9–3.2 billion USD per year, and the broader economic impact (direct and indirect expenditure) at between 8.5 and 20.4 billion USD per year. Marine tourism is one of the largest sectors in the ocean economy, and with 8.9–13.6 million marine diving tourists worldwide supporting up to 124,000 jobs, the scuba diving sector could be at the forefront of transformative change for local and global ocean equity and sustainability.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference47 articles.

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2. UNCTAD. The Oceans Economy: Opportunities and Challenges for Small Island Developing States. 40 (2014).

3. CLIA Identifies Top Cruise Trends for 2019, Selling Tips for Agents. https://www.travelmarketreport.com/articles/CLIA-Identifies-Top-Cruise-Trends-for-2019-Selling-Tips-for-Agents.

4. Mapping the global value and distribution of coral reef tourism;Spalding M;Marine Policy,2017

5. Diving tourism in Mexico – Economic and conservation importance;Arcos-Aguilar R;Marine Policy,2021

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