Perseverance essential in protecting environment (China Daily) Updated: 2006-06-01 09:17
Beijing Youth Daily, one of the capital's major mass-circulation papers,
reported on Tuesday that leading hotels in Beijing have resumed supplying
disposable articles such as toothpaste, toothbrushes, razors, combs and
slippers.
This means that they have turned their back on the pledge made
at last year's launch of the "Green Hotel Campaign."
And it's the second
time that such a "campaign" has ended in failure, said the paper's report,
pointing to a similar case in 2000.
As far as these failures are
concerned, some hotels blamed the demands of their guests, while higher
operating costs were to blame in other cases.
This may be true, but it
also shows these hotels have not worked hard enough to fulfil their
promise.
Going "green" is not a public relations tactic to lure
customers, nor should it be a short-cut to reduce management costs.
It
should not have been restricted to a "campaign," an operation or series of
operations that only have a short-term goal.
Going "green" should be more
than this. It should become a way of life. Hotels have a duty to take the
lead.
In the past, the hotel business was considered a non-polluting
industry. But in actual fact, the building of hotels and their operation in the
country's booming tourism trade has already caused great concern by damaging the
environment of many scenic areas.
Meanwhile, hotels have turned out to be
major energy and water consumers and equally major generators of
waste.
Beijing's star-rated hotels, of which there are more than 600,
guzzle 80 per cent of the total electricity consumed by the hotel sector in the
Chinese capital. Meanwhile, these hotels generate 4,000 tons of waste from
disposable items and account for 10 per cent of the city's total water
consumption.
As the number of tourists increases every year, their energy
and water consumption as well as garbage production will continue to
soar.
Hotels have an opportunity to contribute significantly to saving
power and water and reducing waste generation when they adopt environmentally
friendly practices.
In fact, Beijing has assured the world that the 2008
Olympics will be "green." To this end, it has already announced specific
guidelines for hoteliers to improve their infrastructure and
installations.
By late April, 109 of Beijing's hotels had already signed
"green" agreements with the Beijing Olympics' organizing
committee.
Meanwhile, the China National Tourism Administration on March
23 issued the national standard for hotels that hope to call themselves "green,"
requiring them to promote recycling and reducing power and water
consumption.
It will take time for all the people tourists
included to embrace this ideal and change their way of life
accordingly.
But hotels should not sit back and do nothing. And it is
even worse when they abandon what they set off to do.
They have many ways
to help their customers join the effort to go green.
For instance, they
can place promotional leaflets in hotel rooms, helping their customers
understand why they should use disposable items as sparingly as
possible.
They should have persevered with the campaign and only
distributed disposable items whenever customers specifically requested
them.
Meanwhile, the media should not simply report the failure of hotels
to keep their "green" promises as the fault of hoteliers and their
customers.
They should call on
the public especially every traveller to adopt a green way of travel,
to help protect the earth upon which our livelihood depends.
Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
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