Recovery, resilience, recalibration, or bouncing back are a few examples of keywords that are at the center of any discussion surrounding the hospitality industry's economic prospects this past year. However uncertain the economic future may be, major crises of earth systems are unabated to date. While similarities exist between resiliency and sustainability (i.e. both concepts refer to the state of a system or organization over time in response to instabilities), there are notable differences, and conflicts, in the two concepts (i.e. achieving short-term economic resiliency at the expense of socio-environmental wellbeing). Looking forward, all eyes are on resiliency (growth!) in hospitality but how do we decouple growth from impacts, most notably carbon emissions? How do we ensure that sustainability is a component of resiliency (or vice versa)? What are the five priorities the hospitality industry should set to tackle resiliency and sustainability at the same time in 2021?

Andreas Koch
Andreas Koch
Managing Director at blueContec GmbH

This crisis includes a question to all of us. Namely the question, as it is posted here, how we all want to move into the future. Resiliency and sustainability are the buzz words in any strategic discussion, but for me, even these concepts jump too short. We do not need to “sustain” the status, we need to find ways to regenerate ourselves, the hospitality sector, our employees, and the future tourists. A crisis like this is showing the way forward, unfortunately in an often painful way. Which values and structures are supporting more resiliency, which qualities in hospitality have regenerative characters. Let me highlight the five priorities, that I feel will lead the hospitality sector into a resilient, inspiring, attractive and healthy future:

1.) Regenerative technology

This includes technologies that support circularity and regenerative logic like cyclic water systems or technologies harvesting natural energy. We can operate hotels that produce more energy than they consume. The best would be to learn from each other like the 10.000 ecovillages worldwide that share their Know-How and co-create the future as such. Can you image all hotels worldwide to access the same state of the art technologies…this would lead to an economy of scale of regenerative technologies.

2.) Regenerative product development

Experiences are king in these times, but are these experiences regenerative? What about taking a look at the world challenges and designing experiences that serve both: Your clients AND our planet as well as your region. There are many examples for this: Authentic experiences around local products, regenerative mobility (sailing, hiking, biking…), local communities inclusion, slow travel activities in protected nature areas, and marine parks.

3.) Regenerative climate protection

Yes, tourism IS creating emissions and supports climate change, but let's keep the dimensions right. The energy production of hotels and even more the indirect effect through buying conventional farming products have an even bigger effect on the climate than all transport-related Greenhouse Gas Emissions. If all hotels apply regenerative technologies and commonly decide to support regenerative agricultural production through their procurement policies this would be the biggest climate protection measure ever on this planet. And by the way: This would overcompensate the flight emissions by far. I am not saying that we do not need to find new innovative flight/transport solutions, but let's focus on what the hospitality sector can do in 2021.

4.) Regenerative humanity

Who does not want and need to regenerate after this crisis? Hotels can play a vital regenerator role on this planet driving the change for a more resilient, more healthy, and more environmentally sound development. Being a regenerative hotel is attractive for your clients, your employees, your suppliers, your region, and this planet. Even more: You show the way forward by creating a resilient and regenerative business case and as such lead the change that this crisis calls us up to.

5.) Regenerative quality

We need to extend our understanding of hotel quality from the strong focus on customers to a more balanced view of all hotel stakeholders like employees, suppliers, local partners, and residents, etc. Quality is becoming a more relational quality, which goes far beyond the conventional guest satisfaction focus. Saying this, we need new ways of reporting and accounting beyond the financial numbers and the conventional quality measures. We need to report on our successful positive impact to regenerate tourism, people, and our planet. Let's move from the negative footprint to the positive handprint mindset. For me, hotels can be a viral inspiration for a new regenerative world.

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