"Will the next 50 years bring the Great Decoupling or the Great Collapse?" [1] All bets are on the former when economies thrive decoupled from greenhouse gas emission. Decoupling must equally occur between societal development and biocapacity. The hotel sector has developed many sustainability and ESG approaches to chart a course of action towards decoupling growth from resource intensity which is known as the Great Decoupling.

And Great Hopes are set on the ability of businesses to innovate.

We are currently experiencing two approaches: those managers that bet on incremental improvements built on familiar technologies and processes [2] and those entrepreneurs that seek radical innovations [3] which are possible game changers on the sustainability front.

Faced with an increasing number of alarming records being broken [4], the pressing question is not whether change needs to happen but how it should unfold - as a process of continuous improvements or as a seismic shift leading to radical changes?

Considering the fragmented nature of the hospitality sector with its complex ownership and management models and reliance on a complex (and impactful) tourism value and supply chain, two questions are asked (feel free to tackle only one question of your choice, or all of course):

  1. Are incremental improvements of business models and processes a safe bet and sufficient to achieve substantial and required change? (with supporting examples)
  2. What do you think is/are the radical change(s) necessary in the tourism and hospitality sectors to effectively deal with major sustainability challenges? (with supporting examples)

References

[1] Steffen, W, Broadgate, W, Deutsch, L., Gaffney, O, and Ludwig, C. (2015). The trajectory of the Anthropocene: The Great Acceleration, The Anthropocene Review, 2(1), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1177/2053019614564785
[2] Schumpeter, J. A. (1934), "The Theory of Economic Development", in Baumol, W.J. (1990), "Entrepreneurship: Productive, Unproductive, and Destructive", Journal of Political Economy, 1990, vol. 98 no. 5. The University of Chicago.
[3] Christensen. C.M., Hall, T., Dillon, K., and Duncan, D. S. (2016), Competition Against Luck. The story of innovation and customer choice, HarperCollins, New York.
[4] United Nations Environment Programme (2023). Emissions Gap Report 2023: Broken Record - Temperatures hit new highs, yet world fails to cut emissions (again). Nairobi. https://doi.org/10.59117/20.500.11822/43922.

Henri  Kuokkanen
Henri Kuokkanen
Associate Professor at Institut Paul Bocuse

While radical change is always a tempting idea, I strongly believe that change toward sustainable hospitality must happen incrementally. Hospitality is driven by profit, and guests need to be - at minimum - receptive to sustainability before change will properly start. For a fundamental transformation of the industry, however, the guest must start expecting true sustainability and express a willingness to pay for like initiatives. Fortunately, first signs of this are appearing in recent research[1]. Room2 in Chiswick, London, offers a practical example of nudging guests toward sustainability by offering them a chance to explore the hotel’s multiple sustainability activities using an information screen placed near the lobby. This represents a gradual step toward creating customer experiences that convey a sense of purpose to guests[2] and, hopefully, eventually can lead to the design of ethically transformative experiences that can alter the consumption behavior of guests permanently after a visit[3]. Such a gradual path to sustainability is much slower and more tedious than a one-off breakthrough would be, but it incorporates the key ingredient, the guest, in the equation. Whether this is enough will then depend on all of us as consumers.

[1] Kuokkanen, H., & Sun, W. (2023). Willingness to pay for corporate social responsibility (CSR): Does strategic CSR management matter? Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research.

[2] Kuokkanen, H., & Catrett, J. (2023). Ethically meaningful customer experiences: Satisfying an evolving desire for purpose through CSR. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 31(6), 1464–1481.

[3] Kuokkanen, H., & Kirillova, K. (2024). Ethically transformative experiences in hotels. Annals of Tourism Research, 105, 103709.

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