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Travel brands, listen to travelers: they want more access to sustainable travel choices. And travelers who make more eco-friendly travel choices have been shown to provide more value to the travel suppliers who serve them.
Sustainable Travel International and Mandala Research partnered for the 2016 Role of Sustainability in Travel & Tourism survey, which revealed that 60% of US travelers have taken a “sustainable” trip in the last three years. They found that these travelers spend more (on average $600 per trip), stay longer (seven days compared to four days) and bring higher benefits to local communities including job creation, giving-back and volunteering. (For more, read Making a Difference on a Volunteer Vacation.)
What does it take to get a piece of this lucrative market? It takes establishing an organizational commitment to serving the environment and investing in the operational changes to start making a difference. Let’s look at how a few industry players have already joined the movement toward greener travels for all.
Airports and Airlines “Go Green”
As we explored in The Travel Sector’s Widening Carbon Footprint Calls for Sustainable Solutions (Need URL), air travel is a major source of environmental concern. This puts airports and airlines under increased scrutiny, as many travelers want to at least minimize the environmental harm caused by their behaviors and make appropriate choices. So let’s take a look at what air sector companies are doing to promote more eco-friendly travels:
Visit TheBalance.com to learn about other environmentally friendly airports.
TripAdvisor’s GreenLeaders Set the Green Hotel Standard
Consumers who want to make more environmentally friendly travel choices can look no further than TripAdvisor. The travel site’s GreenLeaders program showcases hotel and B&Bs committed to green practices like recycling, local and organic food, and electric car charging stations. Properties can apply for qualification and when accepted, their TripAdvisor profiles are marked with a badge and program level designation. Platinum Level hotels, for example, are LEED Certified and feature non-toxic pest control, local plants in garden, landscaping designed to minimize flooding, energy-efficient lightbulbs, a staff trained on green practices, and more.
In addition, here are other eco-friendly practices travelers might find at eco-friendly hotels:
You’ll find some of these features as you Tour the Hotel of the Future. But for now, taking the top 3 spots in Groundswell.org’s list of the most eco-friendly hotel chains are:
Subscribe to our Inside WEX blog and follow us on social media for the insider view on everything WEX, from payments innovation to what it means to be a WEXer.
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