There seem to be two schools of thought in regards to achieving greater sustainability. One is based on a behavioural change to tackle societal and environmental challenges. More precisely in managing resources with moderation, restraint, and constraint (e.g. Reduce-Reuse-Recycle mantra). The other approach focuses on developing and implementing technologies to drive change. Here, the premise is that greater sustainability can be achieved if green technology is developed and deployed rapidly. With this in mind and considering the various sustainability challenges as hotels enter this new decade, what are the three (3) technologies to implement in 2020?"

Our research shows that the hotel industry must reduce is absolute carbon emissions by 66% by 2030 to ensure that growth in the sector is sustainable. To support the sector to join in reducing emissions at scale, ITP has developed the Hotel Carbon Measurement Initiative (HCMI). Currently being used by over 25,000 hotels globally, HCMI is a free methodology that enables hotels to measure and report on the carbon footprint of a hotel stay or meeting in a consistent way. HCMI allows hotels to:

  • Demonstrate commitment to environmental management;
  • Understand their environmental impact, and start to reduce it;
  • Support corporate customers in collating accurate data on their business travel emissions;
  • Provide data to customers to offset their emissions, should they choose to do so; and
  • Benchmark their emissions against competitors.

Water scarcity affects more than 40% of the global population and countries forecast with highest water stress are among those with greatest tourism growth. To enable the hospitality sector to embed water stewardship programmes to reduce the number of people affected by water scarcity and to identify ways to address it, ITP has developed the Hotel Water Measurement Initiative (HWMI). HWMI is a methodology to calculate the amount of water used in a hotel per occupied room (and per guest night, where data are available) and per area of meeting space per hour. With over 15,000 hotels globally currently using HWMI, this technology allows any hotel, of any size, anywhere in the world, to measure and report on water use in a consistent way. Through HWMI the industry can:

  • Demonstrate a commitment to addressing water scarcity - HWMI is a first step towards better awareness of a hotel's water consumption and thus better efficiency;
  • Assess water scarcity in their areas of operation to make their approach to water stewardship more credible and to improve the risk analysis and sustainability reporting; and
  • Benchmark their water efficiency against other hotels or hotel companies.

More information on how to use these tools can be found on ITP's website: https://www.tourismpartnership.org/resources/

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