The World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), have launched a report that looks to address the issue of single-use plastic products within travel and tourism.
‘Rethinking Single-Use Plastic Products in Travel & Tourism’ launches as countries around the world begin to reopen, and the travel & tourism sector starts to show signs of recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic which has been devastating.
The report is a first step to mapping single-use plastic products across the travel & tourism value chain, identifying ‘hotspots for environmental leakages’, and providing ‘practical and strategic recommendations for businesses and policymakers’, according to UNEP.
The report is a first step to mapping single-use plastic products across the travel & tourism value chain, identifying ‘hotspots for environmental leakages’
It aims to help stakeholders take collective steps towards coordinated actions and policies that drive a shift towards reduce and reuse models, ‘in line with circularity principles, as well as current and future waste infrastructures’.
The report’s recommendations include ‘redefining unnecessary single-use plastic products’ in the context of one’s own business; giving contractual preference to suppliers of reusable products; proactively planning procedures that avoid a return to single-use plastic products in the event of disease outbreaks; supporting research and innovation in product design and service models that decrease the use of plastic items, and revising policies and quality standards with waste reduction, and circularity in mind.
‘Conscious choices’
Virginia Messina, Senior Vice President and Acting CEO, WTTC said: “WTTC is proud to release this important high-level report for the sector, focusing on sustainability and reducing waste from single-use plastic products in Travel & Tourism.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the sustainability agenda with businesses and policymakers now putting an even stronger focus on it. As a growing priority, businesses are expected to continue to reduce single-use plastic products waste for the future and drive circularity to protect not only our people, but importantly, our planet.
“It is also becoming clear that consumers are making more conscious choices, and increasingly supporting businesses with sustainability front of mind.”
Single-use plastic products ‘can be a threat to the environment’ and human health and without deliberate effort across the sector, travel & tourism ‘can and will contribute significantly to the issue’, UNEP says.
It is also becoming clear that consumers are making more conscious choices, and increasingly supporting businesses with sustainability front of mind
It says the COVID-19 pandemic has had both negative and positive impacts on single-use plastics pollution. The demand for single-use plastics items has increased with safety being a high concern among tourists and take-away services being on the rise.
According to the Thailand Environment Institute, plastic waste has increased from 1,500 tons to a staggering 6,300 tons per day, owing to soaring home deliveries of food.
However, the pandemic has also catalysed consumer demand for green tourism experiences around the world, with a 2019 global study finding 82% of respondents are aware of plastic waste and are already taking practical actions to tackle pollution.
The report recognises that global solutions are required to address corporate concerns about the use of single-use plastic products. It aims to support informed decision making based on the potential impacts of trade-offs and of unintended burden shifting when considering the transition to sustainable alternatives.
Key role
Sheila Aggarwal-Khan, Director of the Economy Division, UNEP said: “Travel & tourism has a key role to play in addressing the triple planetary crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution, as well as making circularity in the use of plastics a reality.
“The advent of COVID-19 and consequent proliferation of single-use plastic products has added urgency to the crises. With this report, we hope to encourage stakeholders in this industry to come together to address this multifaceted challenge. Only by doing so, can we ensure meaningful and durable change.”
With around 90 percent of ocean plastic derived from land-based sources and the annual damage of plastics to marine ecosystems amounting to US$13 billion per year, proactively addressing the challenge of plastics within the travel & tourism sector is key.