Reflections after fifteen years of driving sustainability in Europe, North Africa and Asia's hospitality sector.

We failed hotel staff trainings.

We never spoke their language and instead forced them to digest kilometers of slides showing drowning polar bears and melting ice caps—images completely disconnected from their daily concerns. 

We failed the clients with our self-righteous, guilt-driven communication.

No one checks into a hotel to save the planet. They didn't fly halfway across the world to be reminded of their environmental impact. They came for comfort, rest, and maybe a cocktail by the pool. Who actually reads the piles of messages stuffed into their rooms?

We failed the owners and architects.

Despite years of advocacy, they still build massive concrete ovens, designed without regard for local climates—south-facing structures without shade that guzzle air conditioning. Are they trying to roast the guests?

We failed the purchasing managers.

We never truly empowered them to distinguish between Vegan, Halal, ISO, or FSC certifications. They're still lost in an endless stream of paperwork sent by suppliers trying to stall rather than comply.

We failed the Chief Engineers.

We didn't give them the right tools—just online platforms they don't know how to use. Instead of working with meaningful performance indicators, they're drowning in unmanageable data. Ask them about CO₂ equivalent emissions—you might be shocked by their answers.

We failed the kitchen teams.

Instead of supporting better food waste management, we dropped in so-called AI-powered smart scales. These tools, implemented far too early in the process, cause more disruption than help. No scale is intelligent enough to replace a chef's judgment—it's insulting.

We failed at policy-making.

It looks like some SOP only exist to tick certification boxes, not to inspire action. Nobody reads them. Nobody acts on them. They're relics of the past. Let's stop glorifying paperwork and start celebrating meaningful human impact!

We failed to manage laundry chemicals.

We left chemical control in the hands of the same companies selling the products. How did no one question this obvious conflict of interest?

And why, after all this time, is stabilized ozone still not the standard solution?

We failed to communicate the limits of sustainability.

Even after optimizing water and energy use, and improving waste management, there's a glass ceiling. The hardest part is maintaining these systems amid staff turnover, shifting regulations, and evolving chain requirements.

Yes, we failed in many ways. But all of these issues can and should be addressed. It's time to reimagine sustainability in hospitality—not as a burden, but as a positive, inclusive, and empowering tool that helps every department work better.