The paper analyzes how the travel and tourism sectors remain highly dependent on favorable climatic conditions and enhanced safety to thrive. Tourists are keen on habitable and exciting natural habitats and destinations in an industry with a revenue contribution towards the global economy totaling $9.25 trillion according to 2019 statistics. Climate variability, directly and indirectly, impacts the quality of water resources, biodiversity, and landscape around tourist sites. The tourism sector contributes 4.9 percent of the earth’s greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), which causes global warming, especially in traveler transportation and accommodative infrastructure. However, in the wake of rising climate change risks, tourism and related businesses are becoming more exposed to climate changes leading to strategic policy planning responses and adaptations that can reduce potential climate change vulnerability, increase opportunities and counter any future challenges for growth. For instance, the study reveals businesses and various destinations are now replacing air transport short-haul flight alternatives with inter-city rail systems necessary to reduce the tourism sector atmospheric gas emissions. Also, tourism companies are cutting down their energy consumption while influencing traveler behaviors towards climate change realities for responsible long term solutions to secure jobs within the sector. Further, by consulting varied literary, scholarly perspectives from Shivani Vora, Scotta and Lemieux, they agree many hotel rooms and other accommodation facilities are now fitted with energy-saving lighting and solar panels sources including light sensors to minimize carbon print and overreliance on hydroelectricity characterized with gas emissions that worsen global warming rates, among other positive responses. Nonetheless, all these positive sector responses have encouraged meaningful, innovative technologies, awareness, product design, and proactive planning for even better sustainable impact within the tourism industry while adapting to emerging climate change effects going into the future.