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This is the first of what we envision will
soon be a regular column dedicated to the sustainable issues relevant to our
hospitality industry. It seemed
perfectly appropriate this first column to start with something that we must begin
to understand in more depth: sustainability.
The myriad
of definitions of the term are all variations of the theme of not compromising
future generations with our current actions.
Okay that is broad, I admit, but it is the essence of the term. Nowadays we hear about the triple bottom line
and environmental ethics and sustainable certifications. Still, it doesn’t change a thing about
sustainability. If our products, actions
or associations compromise the ability of future generations to have the same natural
experience on Earth as we have had then we may not be sustainable.
Hmmm, doesn’t that indict all of us? Yes, to a degree. As a result, we all collectively need to be
paying better attention. As many of you
have heard me say in the past, here we are conducting this never- before attempted
lab experiment on the only planet we call home by altering its chemical balance
and we still are debating whether a customer will accept a surcharge for
converting a hotel to a percentage clean energy? Well I guess I would pay for staying at a
hotel or eating at a restaurant that isn’t contributing to my descendants’
demise, wouldn’t you? Don’t feel
guilty. Sustainability is compromised by
many factors. Population growth in
developing nations is as much a factor as recycling rates in America. Agricultural conversion of rainforest in the
Amazon is as much of a factor as melting ice sheets in Greenland. But with this knowledge that sustainability
is a global issue, do we have a specific responsibility to be sustainable in
the U.S.? Yes! Yes, incontrovertibly, and forever. According to the Travel Industry Association,
domestic and international travelers spent 700 billion dollars in the U.S. in
2006. This produced 178 billion dollars
in payroll income. Sustainability means
balancing that economic gain with strict environmental standards and a
commitment to social responsibility. After
acknowledging that, we can finally get somewhere. Sustainability is all about achieving a
balance. Can products be sustainable?
Can companies be sustainable? Can people
be sustainable? If we recognize that we
have to achieve a balance with the personal and business lives we lead, we can then
approach sustainability with all of these areas. Consequently, the recognition of this allows
us to be discerning with the information that is being marketed. Unless your company’s primary focus is
preserving the biological hotspots of the world, you probably shouldn’t be
promoting your company as “totally green.”
Unless your company is a non-profit with 100% of its earnings going to
support a people in crisis, you shouldn’t be marketing your “total commitment
to sustainability.”
Now, mind you, I am all for sustainable
improvements and the steps toward achieving a balance but let’s be clear about
the concept of sustainability, and let’s stop using the term so
nonchalantly. Once we truly grasp its
meaning, we will find it is the most difficult challenge of our times.