 |  |  |  |  |
| | | | | | | |

|  | Comment about: Sustainability Call to Action: Help Create “Ethical Travel" Standard
|  | | July 20, 2009 | | Can we increase the value of our footprint? | I thoroughly appreciate and support this thoughtful discussion.
Across the globe there are countless initiatives being discussed to address travel, air travel specifically, and climate change. Recent numbers I have read are that tourism trade accounts for 5% of the World’s CO2 Emissions. If you allow for a second lens, tourism employees 10% of the worlds economy. Tourism infuses money into poor economies. Travel encourages protection of natural environments and finally, travel leads to understanding.
The reality is most travelers fall into two distinct categories. Those traveling for "vacation"-pleasure, education, adventure, experiences etc (we will include travelers taking part in National Geographic Tours) and those traveling for work. Both groups are less likely to be focused on this discussion that we "conscious" readers are.
Challenges: Consumers traveling for vacation purposes are not interested in feeling guilty about their travels. They're on holiday! They want to enjoy their experience which includes using plush towels and wonderful bath products. It is a luxury they often don't have at home. Many argue correctly that the "towel" issues is much more about how the the hotels wash their linens than about how guests use them.
Business Travelers are far more interested in convenience. For all of us who travel for a living I think it is safe to say that airline travel has lost any mystery and excitement it may once have had. The very thought of an airport now far worse that going to the dentist. Anything that makes this journey to our destination easier and less unpleasant will be used. Business travelers are focused on getting in and out with as little personal headaches as possible. Public transportation to/from airports is neither convenient nor well communicated. Trying to negotiate rail and bus options is complicated enough for the budget traveler and even cities such as NY and Chicago have done a poor job.
Positive Steps: Vacations: Tour Providers/Companies who have taken the initiatives (offsetting the carbon footprint of the ground portion of the tour) take the first step in educating and encouraging travelers to offset their flights. Many "tour providers" carefully choose locally owned properties and restaurants and hire regional guides, all of which encourage an overall understanding and connection with the destination. I believe that future political and ethical decisions a traveler makes when NOT traveling will be based on these experiences.
Corporations who initiate green travel policies and wield enough status to encourage "green" rental fleets and "green" hotels partners are a start. It will be interesting to see if this can translate into preferred carriers such as Virgin America's who's young fleet of planes are arguably very efficient in both fuel consumption and emissions. Cities focused on ease of public transportation are improving their methods of communication via tools and applications which live on handheld devices.
Bottom Line: Meeting and collaborating using technology is effective up to a point in many but not all circumstances. Face, real face, to face meetings, discussions and SHARED EXPERIENCES are invaluable to many of us.
Beyond reducing your carbon footprint: How about increasing the value of your footprint?
What if we started to think how the travels that we must or choose to make could have a more positive impact? I believe that conference, meeting, corporate travel planners AND individual travelers have a responsibility to make travel worthwhile. "Offsetting" travel, even an entire conference, is not enough. I've attended far too many conferences held at the Ohare and Orlando airports. I contribute little to nothing to the local economy and leave with little to no understanding of the destination I have just "stepped on". Moving conferences to smaller venues which represent a destination (like the Chicago Cultural Center at which the GoodandGreen.biz conference is held) Being informed and encouraged to sleep, eat and shop local and making these choices easier. Recommending and featuring hotels that embrace local/natural/organic within their walls and even encouraging taking an extra day to experience the destination may not reduce our carbon footprint but may offer some level of a positive exchange. Understanding a destination and the people who make up these communities has the potential for global value. -- Kathy Dragon Traveler
Follow on Twitter: @KathyDragon
http://www.TheDragonsPath.com Launching soon: http://traveldragon.com http://www.activewomen.com
2105 Mapleton Ave Boulder, CO 80304 | | |
|
|
|  |
|
Community Innovation book
Exclusive online release.
nuPOLIS President Peter Plastrik and his co-author Theodore Staton are writing a new book, titled , How Social Innovators are Transforming America's Communities. Download the Introduction and Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 4. (It's free.)
|
|
Report: New Immigration Trends
Ground-breaking research.
Open your eyes to the immigration trend no one has noticed yet: millions of immigrants economically, socially, and politically active in the U.S. and their home countries, using modern IT and media in ways nobody expected.
|
 |
 |
|