Sustainability
UN Tourism and The Bahamas spotlight innovation shaping the future of resilient tourism in the Caribbean
UN Tourism's first Caribbean innovation challenge awarded six startups developing solutions for ocean conservation, community tourism, and green tech.
How is RIU Hotels driving child education in the Bahamas and Jamaica through its Proudly Committed strategy?
RIU partners with local organizations to provide literacy, STEM, and nutrition programs for 270+ children across Grant's Town Nassau and Montego Bay centers.
Recent Appointments
View AllLove in Action: Sandals Resorts Releases Corporate Social Responsibility Report in Celebration of Earth Month
Family-owned and operated Sandals Resorts International (SRI), parent company of Caribbean-born all-inclusive brands Sandals Resorts and Beaches Resorts and the not-for-profit Sandals Foundation, proudly unveils its Corporate Social Responsibility Report. Offering a sweeping look at the company's enduring promise to protect and uplift the Caribbean – the place it calls home – the report titled Love Exceeds Expectations showcases more than 40 years of impact, innovation, and stewardship across education, community, and the environment.
Radical changes for Positive Hospitality
In the hospitality industry - just like in the business world in general - a paradigm shift is necessary [see NRDC], which calls for radical changes.
Radical shift to Regeneration
At first glance, you might think things don't look too great for decoupling and green growth in hospitality. Recent research reveals not only a lack of empirical evidence supporting Paris-compliant decoupling [1], but posit that high-income nations that have fallen short of realizing green growth, are very unlikely to do so in the near future [2]. Furthermore, the management paradigms within the hospitality & tourism industry, characterized by relatively brief tenures of general managers and evaluations primarily focused on short-term return on investments, fail to foster an environment conducive to risk-taking, creativity, and radical change [3].
Measuring Climate Risk to Improve Tourism Resilience
Should we stop building hotels in risk areas? That's a loaded question and depends on how risks are assessed. Has the assessment included all "natural" hazards like earthquakes, floods, GLOFs, hurricanes, landslides, heat waves and drought? What about anthropogenic hazards like industrial accidents and terrorism? More importantly, does the assessment include the impacts of climate change over time? It has to.
On a path toward responsible asset management
Coming from a hotel asset management perspective and based on my empirical observations these last years, it seems to me that hotel values (both of existing properties and of development projects) dangerously ignore climate risks.