Over the past 20 years, the hospitality industry has experienced a continuous increase in various 'stamps of approval', especially at the sustainable front. A few large certification bodies with extensive criteria catalogues dominate the market but hoteliers and consumers alike are still struggling to differentiate the reputable and credible ones from the home-made seals of approval. A growing number of hotel chains and independent operators have opted for external, third-party certification in regards to their hygiene and sanitation standards in light of the current pandemic. Is there an increased interest in micro-certification? Why not look for a plastic-free certification? What about a carbon natural certification or a water-efficient certification? A plant-based restaurant certification? So micro certifications with low-barriers of entry for hoteliers who could build their sustainability endeavours along micro-certification, like pieces of a puzzle. Would micro-certification facilitate consumers' understanding of the meaning and intention of certification?

Benjamin  Lephilibert
Benjamin Lephilibert
Founder & CEO, LightBlue Environmental Consulting

Sustainability is such a broad topic, that either you try to cover all aspects and accept to hardly scratch the surface, or you design a catalogue with hundreds of criteria that no management team will adopt, or you go for focused certifications (= micro certifications).

I believe in the latter, like The PLEDGE on Food Waste. It doesn't pretend to make your restaurant green, but certainly to make it more cost-effective, alongside other positive externalities of food waste reduction.

While co-desiging the PLEDGE, there were 3 aspects we wanted to ensure:

a) the business case must be clear

b) it has to be practical for operations

c) it should help structure and support the ecosystem of "green" solution providers.

This is where well established certification often fall short.

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