The Caribbean region is also devising new climate change strategies following the devastation of Hurricanes Irma and Maria last year, whose impact, experts say, was intensified by the effects of global warming.

Frank Comito, the chief executive of the Caribbean Hotel & Tourism Association, an organization that represents businesses in 32 Caribbean destinations, said that the hurricanes had forced the Caribbean to accelerate its preparedness for natural disasters. Many of the affected hotels such as Secret Bay, in Dominica, used storm resistant materials when they rebuilt over the past year, while new hotels like Silversands Grenada are being constructed further back from the sea and at higher elevations to protect them from floods.

Another notable step will come in January when the Global Tourism Resilience and Crisis Management Centre is scheduled to open at the University of the West Indies Mona Campus, in Kingston, Jamaica. The center is supported by the United Nations tourism organization and the Jamaica Tourist Board, and its chairman, Edmund Bartlett, said that its mission is to conduct research on destination preparedness, management and recovery from events — like recent hurricanes — that disrupt tourism.

The bottom line is that there appears to be hope for travel and tourism to continue to grow in the wake of global warming.

“The travel world isn’t ignoring the severity of climate change,” Ms. Redman of Greenpeace said. “Many are even trying to find a way to slow down it down so that tourism can keep thriving.”