I hold a Bachelors in Economics from University of La Laguna, MSc in Environmental and Resource Economics from University of Wisconsin (Madison, WI), PhD in Economics from University Carlos III de Madrid.
RESEARCH, TEACHING, or OTHER INTERESTS
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance, Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
21
Scopus Publications
1457
Scholar Citations
15
Scholar h-index
25
Scholar i10-index
Scopus Publications
Green Human Resource Management and Employee Green Behaviour in Hotels: Mediating Roles of Job Satisfaction and Work Well-Being Vanessa Guerra‐Lombardi, Desiderio Gutiérrez‐Taño, Raúl Hernández‐Martín, Noemi Padrón‐Fumero Business Strategy and the Environment, 2026 This study investigates the impact of green human resource management (GHRM) practices on employee green behavioural intention (GBI) and in‐role green behaviour (EGB‐IR) in the hospitality sector. Drawing on conservation of resources (COR) theory, we examine the mediating roles of job satisfaction and employee well‐being as psychological resources activated by GHRM. Survey data from 536 hotel employees in the Canary Islands were analysed using consistent partial least squares structural equation modelling (PLSc‐SEM). The results show that GHRM significantly enhances both GBI and EGB‐IR, with job satisfaction playing a key mediating role. While GHRM also increases employee well‐being, this construct does not mediate the relationship with actual green behaviour, suggesting potential limitations in its capacity to trigger voluntary sustainability actions under high‐pressure work conditions. Mediation analysis further confirms that job satisfaction serves as a more robust psychological mechanism than employee well‐being for translating green intentions into actual environmental behaviours. These findings highlight the need to align environmental strategies with human sustainability and reinforce the importance of psychological enablers in fostering behavioural change. This is especially relevant in the hospitality industry, where employees are both strategic actors and sustainability ambassadors in a sector facing critical environmental challenges.
Operationalizing systemic multi-hazard and multi-risk assessment: Lessons from the MYRIAD-EU framework Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler, Robert Šakić Trogrlić, Karina Reiter, Anne Sophie Daloz, David Geurts, Lin Ma, Noemi Padrón-Fumero, Sharon Tatman, Silvia Torresan, Carmen D. Álvarez-Albelo, Veronica Casartelli, Roxana Ciurean, Maria Katherina Dal Barco, Jaime Díaz-Pacheco, Juan José Díaz-Hernández, Pedro Dorta Antequera, Melanie J. Duncan, Davide Mauro Ferrario, Sara García-González, Stefania Gottardo, Raúl Hernández-Martín, Abel López-Díez, David Romero Manrique, Diep Ngoc Nguyen, Marleen C. de Ruiter, Nikita Strelkovskii, Philip J. Ward Iscience, 2026 Multi-hazard and multi-risk contexts are increasingly recognized as central to disaster risk reduction and climate adaptation. While there is a recognized need to move beyond single-hazard and single-sector approaches, practical frameworks for systemic multi-hazard and multi-risk assessment remain scarce. In response, the Horizon 2020 Multi-hazard and sYstemic framework for enhancing Risk-Informed mAnagement and Decision-making in the E.U. (MYRIAD-EU) project developed a conceptual framework grounded in systemic risk research and structured around a six-step iterative process. This paper critically reflects on its implementation across five European pilot regions. Using project deliverables, a survey, and a focus group, we assess the framework's strengths and limitations and distil lessons learned from both its development and its practical application. These lessons learned are that the framework provides a valuable roadmap for structuring complexity, fostering dialogue with stakeholders, and distinguishing direct from indirect risks. However, challenges remain regarding data, capacity, tool integration, and communication. We conclude with recommendations for improving usability, institutionalization, and long-term uptake.
Reducing risk together: moving towards a more holistic approach to multi-hazard and multi-risk assessment and management Philip J. Ward, Sophie L. Buijs, Roxana Ciurean, Judith N. Claassen, James Daniell, Kelley De Polt, Melanie Duncan, Stefania Gottardo, Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler, Robert Šakić Trogrlić, Julius Schlumberger, Timothy Tiggeloven, Silvia Torresan, Nicole van Maanen, Andrew Warren, Carmen D. Álvarez-Albelo, Vanessa Banks, Benjamin Blanz, Veronica Casartelli, Jordan Correa, Julia Crummy, Anne Sophie Daloz, Marleen C. de Ruiter, Juan José Díaz-Hernández, Jaime Díaz-Pacheco, Pedro Dorta Antequera, Davide Ferrario, David Geurts, Sara García-González, Joel C. Gill, Raúl Hernández-Martín, Wiebke S. Jäger, Abel López-Díez, Lin Ma, Jaroslav Mysiak, Diep Ngoc Nguyen, Noemi Padrón Fumero, Eva-Cristina Petrescu, Karina Reiter, Jana Sillmann, Lara Smale, Tristian Stolte Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 2026 Moving towards a more holistic approach to disaster risk management, in which a multi-hazard and multi-risk approach is central, offers many opportunities to increase society's resilience. In 2022, we presented a research agenda of six points that could contribute towards this paradigm shift. In this perspective paper we synthesise key learnings from the MYRIAD-EU project – which ran from September 2021 to December 2025 – reflecting on progress and challenges faced in pursuing this research agenda, and share perspectives that may help to further improve multi-hazard and multi-risk assessment and management. Going forward, we point to several avenues for continued scientific research that we feel would benefit the field: continue the mainstreaming and mutual understanding of concepts and definitions; continue developing a strong evidence base of how dynamics in hazard, exposure, and vulnerability in space and time shape multi-risk; further developing methods for providing both current and future multi-hazard and multi-risk scenarios; increasing the availability of appropriate, solutions-oriented, usable tools; more explicitly including equity issues and equitable disaster risk reduction and adaptation; continue extensively testing and coproducing multi-hazard and multi-risk knowledge in in-depth case studies; supporting the development of Multi-Hazard Early Warning Systems; and strengthening opportunities for Early Career Researcher leadership and empowerment within project structures. We suggest concrete ways in which we believe these topics can be addressed in future years and decades.
Bridging science and practice on multi-hazard risk drivers: stakeholder insights from five pilot studies in Europe Nicole van Maanen, Marleen de Ruiter, Wiebke Jäger, Veronica Casartelli, Roxana Ciurean, Noemi Padrón-Fumero, Anne Sophie Daloz, David Geurts, Stefania Gottardo, Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler, Abel López Diez, Jaime Díaz Pacheco, Pedro Dorta Antequera, Tamara Febles Arévalo, Sara García González, Raúl Hernández-Martín, Carmen Alvarez-Albelo, Juan José Diaz-Hernandez, Lin Ma, Letizia Monteleone, Karina Reiter, Tristian Stolte, Robert Šakić Trogrlić, Silvia Torresan, Sharon Tatman, David Romero Manrique de Lara, Yeray Hernández González, Philip J. Ward Earth System Dynamics, 2025 Effective disaster risk management requires approaches that account for multiple interacting hazards, dynamic vulnerabilities, and institutional complexity. Yet many existing risk assessment methods struggle to reflect how these risks evolve in practice. This paper explores multi-hazard risk dynamics through stakeholder interviews across five European regions (Veneto, Scandinavia, the North Sea, the Danube Region, and the Canary Islands). Stakeholders described how exposure and vulnerability shift over time due to climate change, urban development, and socio-economic dependencies. The interviews highlight governance challenges and the critical role of institutional coordination, as well as synergies and asynergies in DRR measures, where efforts to reduce one risk can unintentionally increase another. By foregrounding real-world experiences across diverse hazard landscapes and sectors, this study offers empirical insights into how multi-hazard risk is perceived and managed. It underscores the need for flexible, context-sensitive strategies that bridge scientific assessment with decision-making on the ground.
Green Behavioural Intention and Behaviour of Hotel Employees: Mediation Roles of Customers, Coworkers, Supervisors, and Corporate Attitudes Vanessa Guerra-Lombardi, Desiderio Gutiérrez-Taño, Raúl Hernández-Martín, Noemi Padrón-Fumero Sustainability Switzerland, 2025 This study investigates the mechanisms through which employees’ green behavioural intention (GBI) translates into employee in-role green behaviour (EGB-IR) in the hospitality sector. Drawing on the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) and the Value-Belief Norm (VBN) theory, we propose an extended model that incorporates four contextual mediators —customers’ environmental attitudes (CEAs), coworkers’ green work climate (CGWC), supervisors’ commitment to the environment (SCE), and environmental organisational policy (EOP)—to explain how the relationship between intentions and behaviours is mediated by these social and organisational factors. Data were collected through a self-administered survey of 497 employees from hotels located in the Canary Islands, a recognised coastal tourism destination facing relevant environmental challenges. The proposed relationships were tested using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling (PLS-SEM). Results confirm that GBI significantly predicts in-role green behaviour (EGB-IR), and all four contextual factors partially mediate this relationship. Among them, EOP and CGWC emerged as the most influential mediators. These findings underscore the importance of aligning individual motivation with supportive workplace environments to foster consistent sustainable practices in hospitality organisations. This research contributes to the growing literature on green behaviours in hospitality by empirically validating a multilevel TPB-VBN-theory-based framework and highlighting key points for hotel managers aiming to strengthen their environmental commitment through employee engagement.
From vulnerability to resilience: Empowering stakeholder-driven just transitions in island tourism economies Ivelina Mirkova, Noemi Padrón-Fumero Energy Research and Social Science, 2025 Achieving a just transition is essential for addressing the climate emergency, particularly in tourism-dependent island economies that face unique vulnerabilities such as environmental pressures, small-scale electricity networks, and heavy reliance on tourism. This study investigates how political dynamics, economic dependencies, and equity concerns influence stakeholder perceptions in tourism-dependent island economies, offering guidance for governance frameworks aimed at sustainable and inclusive outcomes. Framed within the concept of “just transition,” it addresses the multi-sectoral challenges of energy transitions, climate resilience, and sustainability, integrating environmental, social, and economic justice across key sectors like transportation, water management, and tourism. To explore this, we use a mixed-methods approach, engaging 36 stakeholders from various sectors to explore essential elements for a fair transition, including access to information, stakeholder engagement, transparency, and governance. Our findings using Q methodology reveal a range of views influenced by political contexts, from skepticism about policy effectiveness to debates on energy management strategies. The analysis suggests that framing transition issues in a way that prioritizes collaborative problem-solving over ideological divides can reduce polarization, enhance focus on shared goals, and improve perceptions of fairness and inclusiveness making discussions more pragmatic and solution-oriented. To effectively address the social and environmental challenges faced by island regions, policymakers must develop inclusive frameworks that integrate transparent policy evaluation, stakeholder collaboration, and adaptive governance.
The Local Turn in Tourism Statistics Within the Statistical Framework for Measuring the Sustainability of Tourism 2024 Raúl Hernández-Martín, Noemi Padrón-Fumero, Hugo Padrón-Ávila Sustainability Switzerland, 2025 Contemporary challenges in destination management, particularly those related to sustainability, tourism behavior, and mobility, require granular, local-scale data to inform public and private sector decisions. However, the traditional international tourism statistics standards, such as IRTS 2008 and TSA:RMF 2008, have focused on national and, to a lesser extent, regional scales, overlooking local destinations as a relevant level for the measurement and analysis of tourism. As a result, no common conceptual framework has been available for producing statistical information for local destinations, despite tourism impacts being primarily felt at this level. The endorsement by the United Nations in 2024 of the new Statistical Framework for Measuring the Sustainability of Tourism (SF-MST 2024) has addressed this gap, marking a crucial shift toward recognizing local tourism destinations within sustainability measurement. In this conceptual paper, the recent local turn within this new international statistical standard is explored. Furthermore, by comparing SF-MST 2024 with previous documents, an extended conceptual framework for tourism statistics is developed, including the spatial dimension. Finally, in this paper, the implications for the implementation of the framework in local tourism destinations are discussed.
A participatory waste policy reform for the hotel sector: evidence of a progressive Pay-As-You-Throw tariff Eugenio Diaz-Farina, Juan J. Díaz-Hernández, Noemi Padrón-Fumero Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 2025 The hotel industry is increasingly developing voluntary measures to tackle waste generation, but they fall short of the problems faced by municipal waste services in many tourist destinations. This paper exemplifies how a collaboratively designed waste tariff reform for hotels in a tourism-intensive municipality can achieve a sustainable waste management system through stronger collective action, involving not only the hotel sector but also the city council and waste management companies. The co-created Pay-As-You-Throw tariff meets the demands of the stakeholders by establishing a progressive waste charge that penalizes hotels based on their waste generation intensity, defined as the ratio between waste flows and size. In addition, a competition system is introduced by imposing penalties (or rewards) according to whether the waste generation intensity is above (or below) the sector average during the settlement period, incentivizing waste prevention, recycling and encouraging long-term investment in sustainable waste management. The tariff is consistent with the principles of the EU’s Circular Economy Package and offers hotels a competitive advantage, while ensuring a progressive waste charging system and waste management cost recovery. Empirical results of the co-created tariff show a reduction in waste generation intensity and signs of increased recycling rates.
Unlocking water saving potential in tourism destinations using Smart Water Meters Noemi Padrón-Fumero, Alba Bauluz, Juan José Díaz-Hernández, Eugenio Diaz-Farina, Aránzazu Hernández-Yumar Current Issues in Tourism, 2025 Smart Water Meters (SWM) hold significant potential to mitigate water scarcity challenges in tourism-intensive destinations, yet their effectiveness in non-residential contexts remains underexplored. This study evaluates the impact of digital metering and feedback mechanisms on water consumption within tourism accommodations, utilising a geolocated panel dataset encompassing 213 high water-consuming establishments in San Bartolomé de Tirajana (Canary Islands). As a leading year-round destination, this region faces operational constraints that complicate conservation initiatives. Our comprehensive dataset integrates water network technical characteristics, tourism demand and supply variables, and climate factors across sub-municipal tourism zones to account for diverse guest profiles and management practices. Employing a random-effects regression model, we identify key determinants of water usage and uncover distinct consumption patterns between hotels and apartment complexes. The results reveal that while SWM installation significantly improves consumption tracking and enables early leak detection—primarily benefiting utilities—access to frequent digital feedback via web platforms correlates with increased water use. These findings challenge the assumption that digitalisation alone ensures efficiency, emphasising the importance of behavioural, organisational, and financial strategies while offering actionable insights for policymakers, utilities, and tourism operators to optimise digital engagement and adapt water governance.
Developing multi-risk DRM pathways — Lessons from four European case studies Julius Schlumberger, Andrew Warren, Anne Sophie Daloz, David Geurts, Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler, Lin Ma, Noemi Padrón-Fumero, Karina Reiter, Robert Šakić Trogrlić, Sharon Tatman, Vanessa Banks, Julia Crummy, Jaime Díaz-Pacheco, Pedro Dorta Antequera, Sara García-González, Abel López-Díez, Tamara Lucía Febles Arévalo, David Romero-Manrique, Nikita Strelkovskii, Silvia Torresan, Asbjørn Torvanger, Veronica Casartelli, Roxana Ciurean, Judith N. Claassen, Stefania Gottardo, Jeroen C.J.H. Aerts, Marjolijn Haasnoot, Marleen C. de Ruiter Climate Risk Management, 2025 In the context of climate change and socioeconomic developments, disaster risk is intensifying, driven not only by more frequent and severe hazard events but also by complex interactions between these events and underlying vulnerabilities. These interactions can amplify impacts and trigger cascading failures across sectors. Using the Canary Islands, the Danube Region, the North Sea, and Scandinavia as four case study regions, this research explores how the Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways for Multi-Risk (DAPP-MR) framework can support the development of integrated, adaptive disaster risk management (DRM) strategies to reduce risk while addressing these complex interactions. We examine how DAPP-MR enables a deeper understanding of multi-risk systems, facilitates stakeholder engagement, and structures the development of robust, cross-sectoral DRM pathways in these four qualitative applications. The findings indicate that DAPP-MR enables integrated, cross-sectoral thinking and encourages balancing short-term priorities and long-term needs. This research demonstrates that DAPP-MR offers a structured approach to unravelling the complex dynamics between hazards and sectors, while maintaining flexibility in analytical focus. This flexibility allows context-specific priorities to guide the analysis, but it can also make comparing outcomes across different applications more challenging. This study further underscores the need for additional tools to manage and explore the information to support the development and evaluation of multi-risk DRM pathways. • DAPP-MR is used to design qualitative multi-risk DRM pathways in four EU regions. • Its staged approach helps address system complexity and cross-sector interactions. • Limited awareness, data and tools challenge integration of multi-hazard interactions. • Stakeholder engagement promotes learning but raises challenges of continuity.
Challenges in assessing and managing multi-hazard risks: A European stakeholders perspective Robert Šakić Trogrlić, Karina Reiter, Roxana L. Ciurean, Stefania Gottardo, Silvia Torresan, Anne Sophie Daloz, Lin Ma, Noemi Padrón Fumero, Sharon Tatman, Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler, Marleen C. de Ruiter, Julius Schlumberger, Remi Harris, Sara Garcia-Gonzalez, María García-Vaquero, Tamara Lucía Febles Arévalo, Raul Hernandez-Martin, Javier Mendoza-Jimenez, Davide Mauro Ferrario, David Geurts, Dana Stuparu, Timothy Tiggeloven, Melanie J. Duncan, Philip J. Ward Environmental Science and Policy, 2024
Invited perspectives: A research agenda towards disaster risk management pathways in multi-(hazard-)risk assessment Philip J. Ward, James Daniell, Melanie Duncan, Anna Dunne, Cédric Hananel, Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler, Annegien Tijssen, Silvia Torresan, Roxana Ciurean, Joel C. Gill, Jana Sillmann, Anaïs Couasnon, Elco Koks, Noemi Padrón-Fumero, Sharon Tatman, Marianne Tronstad Lund, Adewole Adesiyun, Jeroen C. J. H. Aerts, Alexander Alabaster, Bernard Bulder, Carlos Campillo Torres, Andrea Critto, Raúl Hernández-Martín, Marta Machado, Jaroslav Mysiak, Rene Orth, Irene Palomino Antolín, Eva-Cristina Petrescu, Markus Reichstein, Timothy Tiggeloven, Anne F. Van Loon, Hung Vuong Pham, Marleen C. de Ruiter Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 2022
Operationalizing systemic multi-hazard and multi-risk assessment: Lessons from the MYRIAD-EU framework S Hochrainer-Stigler, RŠ Trogrlić, K Reiter, AS Daloz, D Geurts, L Ma, ... Iscience 29 (3) , 2026 2026
Reducing risk together: moving towards a more holistic approach to multi-hazard and multi-risk assessment and management PJ Ward, SL Buijs, R Ciurean, JN Claassen, J Daniell, K De Polt, ... Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 26 (3), 1325-1345 , 2026 2026 Citations: 3
Bridging science and practice on multi-hazard risk drivers: stakeholder insights from five pilot studies in Europe N van Maanen, M de Ruiter, W Jäger, V Casartelli, R Ciurean, ... Earth System Dynamics 16 (6), 2295-2311 , 2025 2025 Citations: 7
Reducing Risk Together: moving towards a more holistic approach to multi-(hazard-) risk assessment and management PJ Ward, S Buijs, R Ciurean, J Claassen, J Daniell, K De Polt, M Duncan, ... 2025 Citations: 1
Developing multi-risk DRM pathways — Lessons from four European case studies Climate Risk Management 50 (100753) , 2025 2025 Citations: 3
D3. 4 final report on forward-looking DRM pathways and recommendations for upscaling and transferability S Gottardo, R Ciurean, AS Daloz, N Padron-Fumero, R Šakić Trogrlić, ... Zenodo , 2025 2025 Citations: 2
Green Behavioural Intention and Behaviour of Hotel Employees: Mediation Roles of Customers, Coworkers, Supervisors, and Corporate Attitudes V Guerra-Lombardi, D Gutiérrez-Taño, R Hernández-Martín, ... Sustainability 17 (13), 5928 , 2025 2025 Citations: 4
Unlocking water saving potential in tourism destinations using Smart Water Meters N Padrón-Fumero, A Bauluz, JJ Díaz-Hernández, E Diaz-Farina, ... Current Issues in Tourism, 1-27 , 2025 2025 Citations: 5
A participatory waste policy reform for the hotel sector: evidence of a progressive Pay-As-You-Throw tariff E Diaz-Farina, JJ Díaz-Hernández, N Padrón-Fumero Journal of Sustainable Tourism 33 (4), 697-718 , 2025 2025 Citations: 12
Multi-Hazard Risk Assessment on La Palma: Building Resilience through Insights from Past and Future Impacts A Maier, A Schäfer, B Khazai, J Daniell, T Girard, J Brand, ... EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts, EGU25-16748 , 2025 2025
The MYRIAD-EU Multi-Risk Software Suite: Integrating Multi-Hazard Solutions for Sectors across Europe J Daniell, A Schaefer, J Claassen, B Khazai, B Blanz, J Brand, ... EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts, EGU25-9769 , 2025 2025
Cross-sectoral Multi-Hazard Risk Perceptions and Misperceptions in Tourism-Dependent Islands: A Canary Islands Case Study N Padrón-Fumero EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts, EGU25-20551 , 2025 2025
From vulnerability to resilience: Empowering stakeholder-driven just transitions in island tourism economies I Mirkova, N Padrón-Fumero Energy Research & Social Science 121, 103966 , 2025 2025 Citations: 10
The local turn in tourism statistics within the statistical framework for measuring the sustainability of tourism 2024 R Hernández-Martín, N Padrón-Fumero, H Padrón-Ávila Sustainability 17 (4), 1430 , 2025 2025 Citations: 10
Canary Islands Tourism Sustainability. Report 2024 R Hernández Martín, C León González, A Almeida Santana, N Antonova, ... Observatorio Turístico de Canarias. Consejería de Turismo y Empleo del … , 2025 2025
Green Human Resource Management and Employee Green Behaviour in Hotels: Mediating Roles of Job Satisfaction and Work Well‐Being V Guerra‐Lombardi, D Gutiérrez‐Taño, R Hernández‐Martín, ... Business Strategy and the Environment , 2025 2025 Citations: 2
Sostenibilidad del turismo en Canarias. Informe 2024. Observatorio Turístico de Canarias. ADC Almeida Santana, N Antonova, S Arbelo Pérez, Y Armas Cruz, ... 2025
Sostenibilidad del Turismo en Canarias. Informe 2024 R Hernández Martín, C León González, A Almeida Santana, N Antonova, ... Observatorio Turístico de Canarias. Consejería de Turismo y Empleo del … , 2025 2025 Citations: 1
Drivers, barriers and key practices of corporate sustainability strategy implementation in hotels V Guerra-Lombardi, R Hernández-Martín, N Padrón-Fumero International Journal of Hospitality Management 120, 103791 , 2024 2024 Citations: 40
Challenges in assessing and managing multi-hazard risks: A European stakeholders perspective RŠ Trogrlić, K Reiter, RL Ciurean, S Gottardo, S Torresan, AS Daloz, L Ma, ... Environmental Science & Policy 157, 103774 , 2024 2024 Citations: 104
MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS
Environmental policy in a green market JL Moraga-Gonzalez, N Padron-Fumero Environmental and Resource Economics 22 (3), 419-447 , 2002 2002 Citations: 233
Adaptation to a changing climate in the Arab countries: a case for adaptation governance and leadership in building climate resilience N Padrón-Fumero Adaptation to a changing climate in the Arab countries: a case for … , 2012 2012 Citations: 199
Invited perspectives: A research agenda towards disaster risk management pathways in multi-(hazard-) risk assessment PJ Ward, J Daniell, M Duncan, A Dunne, C Hananel, S Hochrainer-Stigler, ... Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 22 (4), 1487-1497 , 2022 2022 Citations: 173
The contribution of tourism to municipal solid waste generation: A mixed demand-supply approach on the island of Tenerife E Diaz-Farina, JJ Díaz-Hernández, N Padrón-Fumero Waste Management 102, 587-597 , 2020 2020 Citations: 128
Challenges in assessing and managing multi-hazard risks: A European stakeholders perspective RŠ Trogrlić, K Reiter, RL Ciurean, S Gottardo, S Torresan, AS Daloz, L Ma, ... Environmental Science & Policy 157, 103774 , 2024 2024 Citations: 104
Turismo pos-COVID-19: Reflexiones, retos y oportunidades MR Simancas Cruz, R Hernández Martín, N Padrón Fumero Cátedra de Turismo Caja Canarias-Ashotel , 2020 2020 Citations: 74
Analysis of hospitality waste generation: Impacts of services and mitigation strategies E Diaz-Farina, JJ Díaz-Hernández, N Padrón-Fumero Annals of Tourism Research Empirical Insights 4 (1), 100083 , 2023 2023 Citations: 57
Obsolescencia y políticas de renovación medioambiental en el sector turístico N Padrón-Fumero, C González Hernández, M., León González Cuadernos Económicos de ICE 71, 154-176 , 2006 2006 Citations: 52
The impact of smart meters on residential water consumption: Evidence from a natural experiment in the Canary Islands C Daminato, E Diaz-Farina, M Filippini, N Padrón-Fumero Resource and Energy Economics 64, 101221 , 2021 2021 Citations: 45
Drivers, barriers and key practices of corporate sustainability strategy implementation in hotels V Guerra-Lombardi, R Hernández-Martín, N Padrón-Fumero International Journal of Hospitality Management 120, 103791 , 2024 2024 Citations: 40
Turismo pos-COVID-19 M Simancas Cruz, R Hernández Martín, N Padrón Fumero Reflexiones, retos y oportunidades. Universidad de La Laguna , 2020 2020 Citations: 39
The economics and implications of moratoria on tourism accommodation development as a rejuvenation tool in mature tourism destinations R Hernández-Martín, CD Álvarez-Albelo, N Padrón-Fumero Journal of Sustainable Tourism 23 (6), 881-899 , 2015 2015 Citations: 36
D1. 2 Handbook of multi-hazard, multi-risk definitions and concepts JC Gill, M Duncan, R Ciurean, L Smale, D Stuparu, J Schlumberger, ... British Geological Survey , 2022 2022 Citations: 33
Air passenger duties as strategic tourism taxation CD Álvarez-Albelo, R Hernández-Martín, N Padrón-Fumero Tourism Management 60, 442-453 , 2017 2017 Citations: 26
Reflexiones sobre sostenibilidad turística durante la pandemia: una agenda para el sector frente a los ODS NF Padrón, RM Hernández Turismo pos-COVID 19, 255-262 , 2020 2020 Citations: 18
Polution linked to consumption: a study of policy instruments in an environmental differentiated oligopoly JL Moraga-González, N Padrón Fumero 1996 Citations: 15
Issues on the economics of adaptation to climate change X Cerdá, Emilio y Labandeira Climate change policies: global challenges and future prospects, 29-51 , 2010 2010 Citations: 13
A participatory waste policy reform for the hotel sector: evidence of a progressive Pay-As-You-Throw tariff E Diaz-Farina, JJ Díaz-Hernández, N Padrón-Fumero Journal of Sustainable Tourism 33 (4), 697-718 , 2025 2025 Citations: 12
Reflexiones sobre sostenibilidad turística durante la pandemia: una agenda para el sector frente a los ODS N Padrón Fumero, R Hernández Martín Turismo pos-COVID-19: Reflexiones, retos y oportunidades, 255-263 , 2020 2020 Citations: 12
From vulnerability to resilience: Empowering stakeholder-driven just transitions in island tourism economies I Mirkova, N Padrón-Fumero Energy Research & Social Science 121, 103966 , 2025 2025 Citations: 10