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
Holly Tuppen
Holly Tuppen
Communications Manager, The Long Run

When it comes to hospitality contributing to the protection of nature, collaboration is the first essential step. Nature restoration and ecosystem protection is rarely possible without a large-scale and long-term vision that brings together multiple stakeholders — think local residents/ communities, local councils or government, local charities and environmental groups, neighbouring landowners or businesses, sustainability advocates within the supply chain, guests, investors, local cultural institutions and everyone in between. (At The Long Run we call this the 4Cs — Conservation, Community, Culture and Commerce). This is true of a rural or urban location. To combat the climate and biodiversity crisis we need scale, and none if us can do that alone. 

1. Hotels located in urban settings: which nature-based solutions result in value added to guests, staff, owners and community?

Before developing or building, engage with local environmental groups and conservation experts to find out what the most pressing issues are. Be aware that environmental management and the protection of ecosystems is closely connected. If you're building in a water-stressed area, how can you use indigenous planting to reduce water consumption? If flooding is a concern, how can you build and manage the land to create 'rainwater gardens' that absorb excess rainfall? What knock-on effect does this have on endangered or threatened local species? Could you start and help fund a campaign to encourage others locally to do the same? Work out what issues you're best placed to address. This could include providing a space for local school children to better engage in their natural environment, growing your own herbs and veg (cutting waste and carbon), using biophillic design to green-up an urban area, creating a safe habitat for a particular species. There may even be funding available to design or retrofit conservation-led developments. It goes without saying that welcoming nature into an urban environment creates happier, healthier guests, employees and communities. 

2. Hotels located in natural settings (e.g. forest, coastline): what actions can be undertaken to maintain or restore the ecosystems? 

New hotel, lodge or hospitality developments need to start with how they can best restore or protect an ecosystem, rather than retrofitting conservation initiatives at a later date. This is the best way to ensure the hospitality industry meets its climate targets and genuinely has a positive impact. Tourism is unique in generating revenue from the protection of nature, rather than it's destruction, and we have to make the most of that. Examples include Tahi in New Zealand and Grootbos Private Nature Reserve in South Africa which both transformed completely degraded cattle farms into hotspots of biodiversity. In the Scottish Highlands, estates like Wildland and Alladale use the funds from tourism to rewild landscapes that have been decimated due to excessive numbers of deer maintained for hunting and a lack of natural predators. In rural areas its equally important to contact local stakeholders and landowners to establish joined-up thinking on wildlife corridors, links between national parks and protecting specific species. Hotels in rural areas can also play a leading role in greening up their supply chain e.g. working with local producers to introduce regenerative / organic and wildlife-friendly farming methods. By looking beyond boundaries everyone can have a more positive impact. 

3. Cooperation/Support for greater impact: where can hoteliers obtain help, support or join forces to achieve results

The Long Run is a community of properties, travel partners and experts committed to protecting and regenerating ecosystems for the benefit of all. The organisation supports, connects and inspires members to operate according to a balance of the 4Cs — Conservation, Community, Culture and Commerce. Through this journey, travel experiences have a positive impact, and conservation is socially and financially sustainable. Collectively, Long Run members safeguard over 23 million acres of ecosystems, protect more than 400 endangered species, and improve the lives of 750,000 people. By collaborating and sharing best practice via fortnightly webinars, regional retreats, annual meetings, an exchange programme, and joint marketing activities, together, we achieve so much more than we could alone. 

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