What (or who) helps hospitality companies improve faster? Consumer-led campaigns on plastic straws have pushed many hospitality companies to consider alternatives or simply ban single-use plastics. So far, however, the vast majority of guests still choose their hotels mainly by location and price. Using levers such as taxation or legislation, governments are also increasing the pressure. Recent examples include the European Union's ban on a series of single-use plastics such as cutlery, straws, and stirrers by 2021. Many states across the US are implementing similar bans. Beyond plastics, carbon pricing initiatives are in place or planned in more than 45 countries. The EU's Energy Performance of Buildings Directive requires all new buildings to be nearly zero-energy (NZEB) by the end of 2020 and existing buildings to transition towards NZEB by 2050. Finally, the hospitality industry's self-regulation and voluntary codes of conduct are considered popular approaches in dealing with sustainability challenges, but at times with limited success. Facing mounting environmental issues, are all three parties (government, consumer, industry) playing an equally important role? Do consumers have the foresight to act as a useful lever of change? Taxes and legislation are in the pipeline across the globe, so what needs to be done today to minimize the risk of getting hit? And how about driving consumer behavior change through inspiring guest experiences?

Peter Varga
Peter Varga
Assistant Professor at EHL Hospitality Business School

Most hotel guests have already heard about overall sustainability challenges, and many of them have developed a basic awareness in their behavior. Nevertheless, the attitude-behavior gap is still very wide between what customers think is right and what they actually do, or can afford to do. Today's sustainable hospitality products and services such as organic F&B, sustainable constructions, ecohotels…etc. stay considerably exclusive. Hence, if governments become much more engaged in supporting the sustainable transformation in hospitality, through tax reduction, subsidies and sustainable policies…etc.

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