Nature and its ecosystem services are at the center of the hospitality business proposition: from food and beverage offers to guests' enjoyment of natural landscape at a destination. Nature is not only a 'capital' component available to businesses, but a source of solutions to mitigate and adapt to climate change and protect biodiversity while ensuring the well-being of staff and guests alike. Nature is a prerequisite for a successful business, however, a 40% drop in natural capital per person has been recoded over the past two decades (Dasgupta, 2021). 'Burning' though this inventory of natural capital without a regeneration plan should result in alarm bells ringing. As the Science-Based Target Networks summarizes: "Nature is the backbone of human well-being and the foundation for all economic activity" (SBTN, 2020, p.2). Considering the value of nature to the hospitality industry and the threat of biodiversity collapse, recording and accounting for natural capital and integrating the outcome into the decision-making processes while setting regeneration targets is crucial. Ahead of the official launch of the Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (on World Environment Day, June 5th) by the United Nations, here are a three questions to tackle ((choose one or answer all, sharing of best practices is welcomed):

  1. Hotels located in urban settings: which nature-based solutions result in value added to guests, staff, owners and community?
  2. Hotels located in natural settings (e.g. forest, coastline): what actions can be undertaken to maintain or restore the ecosystems?
  3. Cooperation/Support for greater impact: where can hoteliers obtain help, support or join forces to achieve results

References

  • Dasgupta, P. (2021), The Economics of Biodiversity: The Dasgupta Review, London: HM Treasury.
  • SBTN (2020). Science-Based Targets for Nature: Initiatil Guidance for Business. Science Based Tageets Network.
  • Tew, N.E., Memmott, J., Vaughan, I.P., Bird, S., Stone, G.N., Potts, S.G., and Baldock, K.C.R. (2021). Quantifying nectar production by flowering plants in urban and rural landscapes. Journal of Ecology, 109(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13598
Dr. Anne-Kathrin Zschiegner
Dr. Anne-Kathrin Zschiegner
Technical Assistance Advisor at The Long Run

With the climate crisis looming, everyone has a role to play in restoring and protecting nature. That includes travellers and every single aspect of the travel industry's value chain. Whether you're curating, selling, creating, touring, leading, or inspiring people to explore our treasured earth, there's space to have a positive impact on nature.

Nature needs to be central to business decisions, not a sideliner, and we need to restore balance in how and for what purpose we manage land and marinescapes. We also need more long-term thinking; we're talking 100 years or more. 

The Long Run's 4C framework (Conservation, Culture, Community and Commerce) helps tourism businesses, private parks, and conservancies recognise the economic, social, cultural, and environmental value of a diverse and flourishing ecosystem. No one C is sustainable without the others.

Without nature's careful balance — from pollination to carbon stores — there is no life. While we wait for governments and institutions to make a seismic value shift, we can create microcosms of what needs to happen within our own industries and destinations. Tourism is well placed to do this—because it derives profit directly from the protection of nature, and the link is more apparent. To protect nature in the long-term we need to all look beyond our boundaries towards large-scale change. We need greater collaboration. For example, Long Run members often work with neighbouring national parks and landowners to create wildlife corridors and joined-up initiatives. For example:

 

  • Caiman Ecological Refuge (Brazil) and Oncafari have managed to secure a 200,000 -acre wildlife corridor with neighbouring landowners.
  • Nikoi Island (Indonesia) is working with the Indonesian government and Conservation International to fund and develop a management plan for the marine protected area of the east coast of Bintan (3mio acreas) which has only existing on paper since 2007. 
  • Cottar's 1920s Safari Camp (Kenya), through the Cottar's Wildlife Conservation Trust, worked with over 6,000 Maasai landowners to establish the Olderkesi Conservancy (7,608 acres) to expand the conservation area bordering the South-Eastern part of the Maasai Mara region in Kenya 

Protecting nature in the long term will never work unless the people who live within and near to those landscapes and marinescapes are part of and contribute to driving long-term sustainable economic and social development. Empowering, improving, sustaining and enhancing livelihoods, cultures and communities must be central to any plan to protect or regenerate nature. For example, our members not only employ at least 70% of staff locally but help to establish local enterprises that work for nature, not against it. They also play an active role in collectively supporting over 200 unique cultures and helping others understand how these cultures live symbiotically with nature. These fall under our second and third Cs — Culture and Community.

Last but not least, the protection of nature, and our ability to restore earth, requires income; income for those on the ground doing the hard graft, and income to keep extractive industries at bay. And so, Commerce, is our final but equally vital C. For most of our accommodation members, tourism is one element of Commerce — 2020 has proven that no conservation effort should depend on travel alone/a single source of income. Financial resilience is more important than ever. Increasingly, our members are embedding transformative and regenerative thinking throughout the guest experience, using tourism to shift mindsets and demonstrate how we can all live more symbiotically with nature.

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