Climate change alters outdoor activity suitability and creates asymmetric bidirectional environmental impacts across 47 studies
This systematic review synthesizes evidence from 47 studies examining the impact of climate change on outdoor activities. The scope covers global settings and includes secondary outcomes such as recreation demand, site availability, and ecological pressures. The review highlights that climate change affects outdoor activities through rising temperatures, extreme weather, altered precipitation and snow conditions, and environmental degradation. Evidence indicates an asymmetric bidirectional relationship between these factors.
Feedback evidence remains comparatively limited and mainly concerns emissions and ecological pressures associated with transportation, tourism consumption, facility operation, artificial snowmaking, energy use, and resource consumption. These factors play a secondary but non-negligible role in the overall system. The review notes that feedback evidence remains comparatively limited as a key constraint on current understanding.
The authors recommend that future research should distinguish climate suitability from actual participation. They also suggest strengthening integrated assessments of carbon emissions, adaptation, risk governance, and low-carbon transition pathways in outdoor activities. This practice relevance applies to stakeholders managing outdoor recreation and environmental sustainability.