From the Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism [1] to the Net Zero Roadmap for Travel & Tourism [2], the industry is taking on the decarbonisation challenge and giving itself net zero toolboxes. We have officially entered the Decade of Decarbonisation.

Has the industry equally and forcefully entered the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration [3]? From forest to farmlands, mountains, grasslands and urban environment, nature and ecosystem services are at the center of hospitality processes providing food, filtering water and air and regulating heat in the cities. The industry monetizes the natural beauty of destinations and regularly damages or destroys habitats, sealing ground with infrastructure development. Hospitality developments can be done differently of course, and existing hospitality businesses can prevent, halt and reverse the degradation of ecosystems, paying back into the upkeep and restoration.

Decarbonisation and biodiversity restoration are two sides of the same coin, but are we acting accordingly?

For the year ahead, what are three actions you recommend the industry to implement which have a dual goal of tackling climate change and biodiversity loss?

Sources

[1] One Planet (2021). Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism. https://www.oneplanetnetwork.org/programmes/sustainable-tourism/glasgow-declaration

[2] WTTC (2021). A Net Zero Roadpamp for Travel & Tourism. World Travel and Tourism Council & UNEP https://wttc.org/Portals/0/Documents/Reports/2021/WTTC_Net_Zero_Roadmap.pdf

[3] UNEP & FAO (2021). Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030. https://www.decadeonrestoration.org/

Arjan van Rheede
Arjan van Rheede
Senior Research Fellow in Sustainability at Hotelschool The Hague

As summed up above, the crisis on COVID, Climate Change, Biodiversity lost and social-economical challenges showcases that we are not yet in the safe spot of the Doughnut (Kate Raworth, 2017). SME's, Global companies, and consumers  are acting in ways that are undermining the social foundation and crossing the ecological ceiling of the Doughnut Economy. How to tackle both climate change and biodiversity loss?

The advice ' Think globally, act locally' is not original, but still very valid in this respect. René Dubos coined this statement (version 1.0) to warn that global programs cannot be easily translated everywhere into local actions, shortly after the 1972 Stockholm Conference on the Environment (Gerlach, 1991). Afterwards the statement have been used by grassroots movements (version 2.0) to encourage people to act locally to save the world (Gerlach 1991). Can we use both notions to formulate 3 action to tackle both climate change and biodiversity loss?

Action 1: Act locally to increase our resilience: strengthen the importance of local markets! This will decrease emission of CO2 and these markets are less fragile to emergencies such as COVID and will recover earlier. Version 2.0

Action 2: Act locally to increase our biodiversity: Supporting local agriculture/product to safeguard or support biodiversity. Use your facility as safe havens for biodiversity (green roofs, bee hives or green walls might be solutions that can support biodiversity in and around our build environment.

Action 3: Act locally by translating 'best practices' to your own local setting! Version 1.0

I very much believe that Hoteliers have an unique position to CONNECT and SAFEGUARD these 3 actions in their community, using both notions of 'Think Globally, act Locally.'

Raworth, K. (2017). Doughnut economics: seven ways to think like a 21st-century economist. Chelsea Green Publishing.

Gerlach, L. P. (1991). Global Thinking, Local Acting: Movements to Save the Planet. Evaluation Review, 15(1), 120–148. https://doi.org/10.1177/0193841X9101500107

View all 21 views in this viewpoint