Just when it seemed as if single-use plastics were slowly becoming a thing of the past, COVID-19 hit the industry. The second half of 2019 had seen more and more industry leaders making public pledges to abandon a product group that had become the infamous representative of an old and immoral, linear economy.

A few months later, the former sustainability arch-enemy is experiencing a massive comeback as a hygiene hero. COVID-19 and the fear of future pandemics are radically challenging recent approaches to product circularity/re-use by imposing enhanced hygienic standards. Keeping a strong position against single-use items might impose dramatic acquisition costs and operational distress on businesses slowly recovering from their liquidity breakdown.

Whilst pondering the reputational risk of violating hygiene law on the one side and diminished sustainability efforts on the other, the former is likely to turn up trumps.

The battle for sterility might be won by detergents containing ingredients unlikely to biodegrade in wastewater. Laundry services might cause more emissions due to an average increase of the washing temperature.

Where lies the sweet spot between hygiene rule compliance and sustainability? Must there be a trade-off? Are there Best Practices to share?

Suzann Heinemann
Suzann Heinemann
Founder and CEO of InfraCert GmbH

Sustainability has long since arrived in the hotel industry and has become indispensable for long-term, successful corporate management. Ecologically justifiable management was possible for a hotelier until a few months ago. However the implementation of this has now become a major, unexpected challenge: protecting guests and employees, taking precautionary measures, and still making profits despite all the circumstances.

Every hotelier is faced with new tasks and works hard to implement measures to protect against infection. Combining hygiene requirements and environmental protection in the hotel in the best possible way is a real balancing act, but it is possible. Safety and sustainability can actually be combined, for example by using biodegradable protective masks and gloves. This is just one example of many that we offer our hoteliers.

I am convinced that, despite the new challenges, the hotel industry will come out of this situation more strongly. I believe that sustainability will play an even greater role for hotels in the future to ensure future-proof management and life on earth as a whole.

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