Mountain tourism is sensitive to global warming and responsible in coping to and adapting with its effects.\nThe fast growing global tourism industry is bound to increase its share from existing 5 per cent of total global CO2\nemissions, one of the high up sources of global warming. The three quarters (as the majority) of this emission is\ncovered by mechanized mobility of passengers (both tourists and non-tourists). The trend of growing ecological\nfootprints of tourists mechanized activities from all kinds of tourism (e.g. mass or alternative) is not only adding to\nthe challenge of global warming but also gradually threatening the sustainability of mountain tourism destinations.\nIn this context, this paper brings its attention towards mass tourism bound emerging mountain tourism destination\nof Nepal which is bound for high growth on international tourist arrivals. Such a trend is compelling to grow tourists�\nmechanized mobility segments in Nepal. The paper focuses tourists� mechanized mobility induced global warming\ntrend and its related various spatial effects in Nepal Mountains. This paper also finds out the responses of various\ndirect and indirect tourism actors in managing tourist mechanized mobility segments and copings. The innovative\nresponses of the local actors in recent time reveal about the considerable contribution to transform the conventional\nmountain tourist destination of Nepal into a new form of sustainable tourism destination. The recent mass tourism\nbound landlocked mountain tourism destination of Nepal and others can learn much from the early matured European\ntourist destinations of all kinds (e.g. Alps, Andes and Rocky mountains) of Europe and Americas on responding to\nsuch negative impacts. The paper finally stresses for the substantial exchange of scientific research information and\nmutual learning among the mountain tourist destinations of all kinds.
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