Legislation regulates the way we utilize natural resources, avoid pollution and harmful substances, manage waste and protect ecosystems and human rights. Supporting sustainability through the use of proactive legislation is nothing new. Rather than being a constraint to businesses and individuals, proactive legislation can eliminate competitive disadvantages and thus be an instrument paving the way to a successful and sustainable future (Berger-Walliser et al., 2016). In many cases, however, legislation is enacted as a last resort. In Germany, a new law on packaging makes it mandatory for the gastronomy sector to provide reusable containers as an alternative to single-use items from 2023 onwards. This is, arguably, a long overdue legislation based on a EU Directive. In a recent representative survey conducted by the German Packaging Institute (DVI) and World Wide Fund For Nature (WWF), 85% of respondents are in favor of introducing a deposit refund system for reusable containers. And while citizens around the globe view climate change as a major threat, the most recent report from the UNFCC warns that climate action plans put forward by nations ahead of COP26 are nowhere close to meeting the goals set in the Paris Agreement. Looking at legislative initiatives in your country, where do you see room for improvement? In which area under the sustainability umbrella do you see the need for more (or less) regulations? Can you share some best (or worst) practices?

Berger-Walliser, G., Shrivastava, P. & Sulkowski, A. (2016). Using Proactive Legal Strategies for Corporate Environmental Sustainability, Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law, 6(1), 1-27.

Marloes Knippenberg
Marloes Knippenberg
CEO of Kerten Hospitality

The triple bottom line for businesses, the community and the whole Ecosystem ultimately relies on economic performance powered by a strong drive for innovation. No legislation or tax exemption can build more impactful and outcome-focused initiatives than public-private efforts that prioritise a sustainability agenda and help ensure each entity is “walking the talk” with the implementation of innovative projects that deliver value. A policy is only as strong and meaningful as its implementation across the whole value chain and the hospitality is a good example of how this could be implemented: collaboratively, on all Locality levels and through overarching social inclusion and a forward-thinking leadership engagement and a firm “push”.

 

What is mission critical is to apply the understanding that sustainability is not all about green planet. It is about the focus on the local community and the supply chain, enforcing agility through responsible investment and going beyond CSR and more towards people-centric communities. Equally important are sustainable corporate behaviour and governments that embrace the need to employ sustainability on multiple layers. Transparency, long-term view deployment and having a committed fiscal support to implement regulations on SME and large corporate levels is critical. It is not enough to be vocal about dumping in the Sea and have put forward legislation that protects the marine and coastal environment. It is all about raising awareness, implementation and going beyond rhetoric on the topic.

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