Seeding responsible tourism: WTTC is keen on green in 2007

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"I decided to take a walk on the beach, and I saw four young Bangladeshi men struggling to drag a portable air-conditioning contraption to a beach shack. It was a heavy, metal box, trailing all sorts of electrical wires in the sand behind it."

The man relating this unlikely scene was Chris Luebkeman, director of Global Foresight and Innovation for the U.K.-based Arup Group. He was talking by cell phone from his hotel room in Dubai.

The workers, he said, were from a nearby hotel and were trying to bring a little cool comfort to a handful of tourists spending their afternoon on blistering sand. The sight of it "may just have been one of the most ridiculous things I have ever seen."

Luebkeman's job is to peer into the unsettled future by studying details of the present-day world. And in the contrast between the commonplace and the unusual -- even in things that appear ludicrous -- he seeks inspiration for change. The very idea of cooling a beach cabana in one of the world's hottest climates with expensive, portable air conditioners, particularly in these days of hyper-awareness regarding carbon emissions, flies in the face of what is fast becoming the agenda of responsible environmental behavior for tourism providers.

The incident that Luebkeman observed is one example of increasing dissonance between the boom in travel worldwide and global environmental concerns. It is also emblematic of the issues being confronted this week by industry leaders at the 2007 World Travel and Tourism Council's Global Travel and Tourism Summit in Lisbon.

The WTTC, whose 97 dues-paying members include the CEOs of the world's largest travel companies (think American Express, Starwood, TUI, Marriott, Carlson), meets annually to discuss pressing industry concerns. And as the world is poised to anoint travel the cultural common denominator of the planet (it now accounts for some 10% of the global gross domestic product and employs more than 231 million people worldwide), the question of just what is appropriate business behavior in the age of global warming has jumped to the top of the agenda. The theme of the summit is "Breaking Barriers and Managing Growth."

With leisure tourism projected to grow 4.2% annually over the next decade, and with an emerging middle class in China and India preparing to inject hundreds of millions of travelers into the infrastructure of world tourism, environmental and social challenges are already reaching critical mass. The WTTC Summit is drawing, in addition to its own membership, hundreds of interested parties to join in the discussion about how to plan for future travel and tourism responsibly.

In the weeks leading up to the summit, Travel Weekly conducted a series of interviews with top tourism industry leaders -- some WTTC members, some not -- as they prepared to head to Lisbon. It became amply clear during those discussions that both awareness of climate change and the use of human capital are driving new decisions and new perspectives on balancing sound commercial judgment with social responsibility.

On the whole, industry leaders say they are convinced that the journey of discovery they are now taking will lead to new ideas and a better understanding of how to balance environmental and social challenges with one of the most favorable economic opportunities the industry has ever enjoyed.

"We have a situation which, I must say, I haven't seen in my 42 years of activity in this crazy industry," said Jean Claude Baumgarten, president of the WTTC. "Things are doing fine all over the world. Traffic is growing, ... which is fantastic. And it seems like the goodies are equally spread all over the world.

"So that creates on one side good feelings. But growth creates new challenges. It creates new types of priorities."

Amid the backdrop of the vital contributions world travel can make to cultural interaction, to human understanding and to international stability, voices like Luebkeman's warn that if the industry doesn't take steps to build for the future with environmentally sound designs that help reduce energy consumption, waste and other problems that add to its carbon footprint, then pressure from outside, in the form of government regulation and taxes, may do it for them. (Luebkeman will be moderating a session at the summit.)

Andrew Cosslett, CEO of InterContinental Hotels Group, said he would be making his first trip to a WTTC Summit and was approaching it with high expectations.

"We certainly start with a view that says, on the whole, the travel industry is a good thing in the world," Cosslett said. "There is no question that the demand factors are very powerful and that notwithstanding any concerns around environmental issues, there will be strong tailwinds pushing growth in the travel market for the next decade. There are tremendous drivers here, and it is a positive thing to bring people in the world together.

"But the question is: How can you make a consistent impact for the good? I think our business is trying to begin the process of understanding what more we can do in that area."

For many, the discussions at the summit, which will be held as a forum in the round, are a starting point in what, until now, have been isolated commitments to environmental responsibility by corporations.

At Fairmont Hotels and Resorts, that commitment started nearly two decades ago, with environmental awareness followed by specific actions. Michelle White, Fairmont's director of environmental affairs, said she saw the gathering as a milestone in the evolution of a more responsible tourism industry.

"Environmental awareness ... is on the upswing in the industry," White said. "A lot of organizations have a lot of work to do. But the environment is not a destination, it is a journey, so there is always something to do. I think as an industry, we are starting to wake up.

"So just having this particular summit and having these people in one room discussing these issues is significant because these are the decision-makers."

That point was echoed by others preparing to attend the event as well as by outside observers. The influence of chief executives and other industry leaders participating in the discussions (Travel Weekly's editor in chief, Arnie Weissmann, is a speaker at the summit) is not only important, they say, but will bring candor to the discussions, even between those who compete with each other on a daily basis.

"CEOs are also individuals," Baumgarten said. "The CEO of an organization has to put his personal conviction in sync with the daily job. I think we have more CEOs who are deeply convinced that this is the right thing to do. And the combination of the two will bring more candid dialogue than [skeptics] might consider."

Some of those CEOs are putting their money behind their convictions. The group includes Jeff Clarke, the CEO of Travelport, which owns Orbitz and Galileo. Travelport has pledged to buy the carbon offsets to cover the carbon emissions generated by the travel of industry and public sector leaders to the WTTC Summit.

Travelport has made other contributions, as well, Clarke said, particularly in promoting transparency in the industry. He said his company was providing or planning to provide environmental ratings for hotels and other suppliers to enable consumers to see the environmental interests of those they might do business with and to exert their own influence, via spending choices, on environmental and corporate responsibility.

"This is on the mind of every CEO in the industry," Clarke said. "It is not only on our minds because of responsibility, but also because it is a personal interest, a personal interest of mine and many other CEOs.

"I don't think there is any debate any longer on the impact of carbon on world temperatures," he continued. "There is no question: The scientific evidence is in, and now is the time when the industry needs to react to this.

"One of the things we at Travelport can do as an intermediary, as technology providers, is to measure travel. We have the ability to do that. There are 800,000 bookings a day. We know where the destinations are. And we are considering initiatives to start building improved transparency by setting up travel indexes that let consumers and environmental organizations know the extent of travel."

Travelport has also created a partnership with the nonprofit Carbon Fund to help consumers voluntarily pay to offset carbon emissions that result from travel. Capital raised in that process is being used to fund energy production from wind, waves, solar and co-generation projects. It is also being used to plant trees, which remove carbon dioxide from the air and replenish oxygen through photosynthesis.

While the airline industry is often singled out as a major source of carbon emissions, there are other sources of travel-related emissions that rank higher, including cars and other ground transportation.

In the car rental industry, some companies are acknowledging that reality by offering hybrids and alternative-fuel vehicles for customers who want a more environmentally friendly ride.

Luebkeman notes that only 3% to 4% of greenhouse gases are traceable to aircraft. Nonetheless, the perception that planes are a major source of emissions has motivated companies like Natural Air, a small airline based in Costa Rica, to become carbon neutral.

To do that, Natural Air has focused not on finding alternative fuels, as has been proposed by Virgin Atlantic's Richard Branson, but on carbon offsets that include company efforts to plant enough trees in Costa Rica's forests to account for the carbon that the airline's operations put into the atmosphere.

Environmentalists say, however, that while airline emissions are very much on the public's mind, hotels and other buildings related to tourism infrastructure are potentially a greater source of environmental pollution.

Hotel chains say they have long taken steps to design and build properties to make them more energy efficient. And they point to initiatives with customers to reduce water usage and linen usage as a way to reduce their environmental impact.

Ed Fuller, president and managing director of international lodging at Marriott International, said the lodging industry had made other major steps over the past few years to improve its environmental status. But he acknowledged that there was more to do.

"There are other parts of the industry that could be more conscious and aware of the issues," he said, "and things like the summit will give people the feeling that there is effort under way. I think cooperation and the opportunity to talk about it is very positive.

"When you get right down to it, the world is ready to try to turn this situation around," he continued. "Yet people also want to be able to take advantage of travel and use those opportunities to have a better understanding of the world around them."

Arthur de Haast, Global CEO for Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels, said: "It's in the best interests of the travel and tourism industry to take the issues of environmental sustainability and corporate social responsibility seriously. The WTTC Summit is an excellent opportunity for the world's most influential companies to address them in a comprehensive and coordinated manner."

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