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Practical Values: Inn Excess

COMMENTARY: Why are hotels' environmental values on permanent vacation?

May/June 2008 Issue


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there's a mini-shampoo-bottle graveyard under my bathroom sink. It's where I bury the souvenirs of stays in posh hotels—the kind with high-pressure showerheads, heated towel racks, and other extravagances I'd never indulge in at home. For years I've stuffed the unused shampoos in my suitcase, quieting my inner environmentalist by promising to recycle the tiny bottles after some houseguest enjoys their fancy contents. But few do, and my pile of plastic continues to grow.

Here's a stat to make toiletry hoarders like me feel appropriately guilty: American hotels log more than a billion room stays each year. That's a whole lot of mini shampoo bottles, few of which will ever be recycled. Add to that the daily sheet laundering, around-the-clock AC, and other amenities we've come to expect from our stays away from home (not to mention the carbon cost of getting there), and you end up with a seriously consumptive vacation. A typical hotel guest uses 218 gallons of water a day—more than three times the national average per capita. And the energy cost of a single hotel room—$2,196 per year—is what it typically costs to power the average American home.

Compact fluorescent bulbs, nontoxic cleaning supplies, and even recycling bins are scarce in most hotel rooms. "Only a fraction of hoteliers are actively engaging in sustainability, which is a little scary considering the fact that there is a strong business case to support their getting involved," says Brian Mullis, president of the nonprofit Sustainable Travel International. Conservation policies can bring operation costs down considerably. Towel- and sheet-reuse programs cut water and detergent use by nearly a third. One study found that equipping rooms with water- and energy-saving devices lowered hotels' utility bills by more than half. And recent surveys have found that consumers will pay up to 10 percent more for anything labeled "green," Mullis says.

If that's the case, then why are hotels so slow to go eco? "I think that most leisure travelers go into 'vacation mode' when they travel," Mullis says. "Many expect to be taken care of and are less likely to conserve resources." Those expectations are reinforced by an industry that associates luxury with an excess of amenities. Case in point: aaa, which evaluates more than 32,000 accommodations throughout North America each year, recommends that its inspectors look for at least two "bottled items" in a hotel's bathroom before awarding it a Three Diamond rating. In a room worthy of its Five Diamond rating (the highest), they look for a "ten-piece personal care package of designer/spa toiletries."

Another reason most hotels haven't gone green is that their business structure discourages it, says Glenn Hasek, publisher of Green Lodging News. "Often franchisors establish standards that prohibit or make it harder for hotel owners to implement green initiatives," he says (example: banning refillable shampoo dispensers because of their "locker-room aesthetic"). At a Best Western meeting last year, 80 percent of franchise owners said they were interested in implementing green practices, but the chain still doesn't have any sustainability mandates. In the face of such sluggishness, a few hotel owners are taking matters into their own hands. Michelle Duffy has started recycling and linen-reuse programs and installed low-flow toilets and motion-activated lights at the Best Western she manages in Novato, California. She has also teamed up with a San Francisco State University hospitality student who is helping Novato's Best Western meet the requirements to join a local program for green businesses.

CONSUMER RETORTS

Consumer Retorts

transportation security administration

If you're going to take my water bottle, can you freakin' recycle it?

the federal ban on carry-on liquids may help stop terrorists, but it's not doing much for the planet. A now-ubiquitous feature of airport security lines around the country is a row of garbage cans overflowing with glass and plastic bottles. In some cities, individual airports handle the contraband; in others, tsa hires contractors to remove it. So does the tsa recycle any of it? Nope. Spokesman Nico Melendez says he's never thought of recycling the bottles. "Why can't they go to landfills?" he wonders. And frankly, he says, the problem isn't tsa's to solve—it's up to passengers to know the rules and to pack accordingly. By the end of our conversation, Melendez is more circumspect. "We're not averse to doing something environmentally friendly with the stuff," he concludes. "Someone just needs to have a solution."  —Casey Miner

have a problem? Oh yes, you do.
Go to motherjones.com/consumer-retorts.

If the nation's hospitality-management schools are any indication, the next generation of hoteliers may be the greenest yet. Cornell University and the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, which have two of the nation's top programs, have faculty members with strong backgrounds in sustainable lodging. The ecotourism class at Johnson State College in Vermont is currently overenrolled. And there's some evidence that travelers are beginning to consider greenness a perk in itself. "Yes, there are challenges with luxury- and design-sensitive hotels," says Jeff Slye, a consultant who helped San Francisco's Triton Hotel, part of the Kimpton chain, switch to organic cotton sheets, bamboo floors, and other green amenities in some of its guest rooms. "But you also are catering to a generally astute clientele, and many are spending money on companies that align with their values. The environment is certainly one of them." There is not yet any universally accepted green-certification program for hotels, but travelers can look for chains that belong to groups like the International Ecotourism Society and the Green Hotels Association—though neither group certifies its members, membership can indicate an interest in sustainability, at least. The travel website Orbitz allows users to search for ecofriendly hotels; Kayak and Travelocity will soon follow suit, and Hotels.com is "carefully considering" doing the same.

The Green Hotels Association recommends that, beyond demanding green services, we well-intentioned travelers call ahead to request nontoxic cleaning products; pack our own soap and shampoo; turn off the AC, heat, lights, and other appliances when not in use; avoid maid and room service—do we really need the individual jars of ketchup?—and (ahem) leave the unused mini shampoos behind.

The Suite Lowdown

A snapshot of companywide sustainability policies at six hotel chains. Individual properties may vary. —K.L.


hotel chain

energy efficiency

water efficiency

recycling & reuse

nontoxic cleaning?

Fairmont

Some cfls; some offsets

Low-flow showerheads, taps, and toilets; linen reuse

Hotelwide and in-room recycling; used furniture donated to community groups

At some locations

Kimpton

50% of rooms and all offices have cfls

Low-flow faucets, toilets, and showers; linen reuse

Hotelwide recycling and fashionable in-room bins; some paper recycling

Yes

Marriott

Energy-efficient lighting, leds, and laundry at some hotels

Some low-flow showerheads; linen reuse

Pilot program only

No

Motel 6, Sofitel, Novotel (Accor)

Motion sensors for AC; leds for exterior signage

Low-flow showerheads and faucets; linen reuse

Battery and fluorescent-bulb recycling; recycling at corporate offices

No

Radisson, Regent, Country Inns & Suites (Carlson)

Some cfls

Linen reuse at some hotels

Some recycling, but not in guest rooms

At some locations

Best Western

No program

Linen reuse

No program

No


 

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Comments:

"Pack our own soap and shampoo; turn off the AC, heat, lights, and other appliances when not in use; avoid maid and room service"

Exactly!!!! It's ok to use the same towel twice in a hotel. You do the same at home anyways. And do you really need your sheets changed each day? Yes you're on vacation, but come on.

My opinion is that Americans are way to comfortable in their surroundings and need to tough it out a bit. This is true for the non-vacation life as well. Huge homes, bottled water only, pre-packaged food all the time, etc. They feel so entitled to all this stuff. I would love to see it all disappear for a year and see who comes out at the end.
Posted by:JMay 22, 2008 5:11:03 PMRespond ^
The economic model is the driving factor for this problem. The markets need to be regulated and retooled to disincentivize the consumption of these goods and services. Profligate water, energy, a material usage should come with a steeper cost to the consumer and business. The current model fails because the utility of our wasteful ways overcomes the monetary costs. If hotels. I would like to see a more rigorous tax on the lavish lodges that would funnel revenue into environmental conservation programs. Businesses that are willing to go green under this model will then be able to distance themselves in the markeplace from those who choose not to.
Posted by:Nick ScottMay 22, 2008 5:39:45 PMRespond ^
There's an innovative program out of Victoria, British Columbia where a company is gathering the leftover soap, shampoo, and conditioner from hotel rooms and recycling it into a laundry soap. www.buffalorecycled.com It's this kind of out-of-the-box thinking that will help make the hospitality industry a little friendlier to the environment.
Posted by:AbbeyMay 22, 2008 6:57:00 PMRespond ^
you can also just put up a do not disturb sign and all the "excess" house cleaning won't occur. Every hotel i have been in that claims to not wash the towels/sheets if you request, end up doing it anyway.
Posted by:a whiteMay 22, 2008 7:52:43 PMRespond ^
I'm Sorry,

But, what a load of ..... If you want to stay in a hotel and want to fret about how many bottles they have, then bring your own. They provide them, because people want them. To think that the hotel industry is going to "go green" because 15% of the population (an unscientific, but I think realistic percentage) wants to feel good about their over indulgence is ridiculous. The vast majority of humanity is struggling on a level that makes such a discussion utterly asinine. I am amazed that you choose to give it so much weight. If Mother Jones thinks that it is serving humanity by writing such drivel, then WOW someone please help us all.
Posted by:DaleMay 22, 2008 11:28:19 PMRespond ^
Kimberly,
Take all those mini toiletries to a women's shelter!!!!
Posted by:EliseMay 23, 2008 7:59:23 AMRespond ^
I'd rather stay in a 'green' room. I find all the crap in conventional motels irritating.

I have all those tiny shampoo bottles. I pour them into large ones, then recycle. But the hotels should just use fillable wall dispensers, not little bottles.
Posted by:elydogMay 23, 2008 10:39:45 AMRespond ^
Not only are our hotels anything BUT green, there is less respect here for the environment than even in the non-industrialized areas of Mexico. Especially in deeper states, like the coasts of the states of Chiapas and Oaxaca, one find a wide variety of ecotourist experiences with environmentally friendly places to stay. And as long as Pemex seems to be freezing the gas at about 2.70 a gallon (from what I am hearing from my brother in Ajijic, Lake Chapala), it's still a fairly affordable car trip.
Posted by:James M. MartinMay 23, 2008 4:31:29 PMRespond ^
Take the stuff they give away and give it to a homeless shelter. Be thankful for smoke free rooms.
Posted by:frankMay 23, 2008 8:04:35 PMRespond ^
Time and again I have followed the directions at hotels as to how to place towels so they will be used again when I am staying more than 1 night and again and again the hotel puts in new towels; I always try to comment to hotel but have no idea if they pay any attention
Posted by:Gerri BrauneisMay 24, 2008 12:20:45 PMRespond ^
oh god, i have been doing the same thing! it drives me crazy they pay such lipservice to "green" washing of their laundry. I believe most hotels have not coordinated the knowledge from the front desk about stay lengths with the cleaning crews. But the front desk/aka management thought to put in the rooms those friendly reminders about leaving on floor or not, so they feel good, look good, etc. But the latino cleaning help is probably usually too difficult to coordinate with the actual visitors so they take the easiest path, just clean all the towels, sheets etc.

I put a do not disturb sign on the door if I am staying several days.
Posted by:andy whiteMay 24, 2008 5:11:34 PMRespond ^
"For years I've stuffed the unused shampoos in my suitcase... ...and my pile of plastic continues to grow." And I thought it was just me. That stuff is like crack cocaine, I can't stop. Somebody help me, please.
Posted by:RaulMay 25, 2008 8:24:07 AMRespond ^
This is why I like solid shampoos.
You can get them from Lush:
http://tiny.cc/KvsO2
Or if you want something at little less opulent there is Chagrin Valley:
http://tiny.cc/TAI5z
Posted by:AnonymousMay 27, 2008 3:50:58 PMRespond ^
I use the toiletries furnished by hotel.Saves packing stuff.When done using shampoo and cream rinse/take home/to finish using products.If you want green items/bring your own.
Posted by:Crysal LakeMay 28, 2008 11:16:42 AMRespond ^
The lack of recycling in hotels has been driving me crazy for years. I usually end up driving a bag of recyclables home! I think it would be a wonderful way for a chain to distinguish itself.
I have to agree about the do not disturb sign, there is no need for someone to change your sheets and clean your room if you are staying over. I think it helps if you have worked in a service industry, where you are conscious of what it's like on the other side. Then you have more a sense of being a considerate guest. (As well as just a reasonable human being.)
Posted by:K LeighMay 28, 2008 6:01:27 PMRespond ^

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