Archive for Green hotels
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Tim
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The days of just booking a hotel by calling the chains toll free number have been greatly changed by large online travel agencies who have cornered the bookings part of the market by combining the best in selection, information and pricing – all key factors for someone planning a trip. Expedia.com® have emerged as the largest online travel agency but in addition to value and scope of selection they have also developed
an online tool that is ideal for the environmentally conscious traveler. Via a very specific approval process hotels can be approved as green properties and customers can now search with that specific criteria in mind .
The Expedia.com Green hotel program has not been activated for very long but new properties keep getting added to the program which now boasts over 2,000 options for the well informed traveler which also is the largest such range of choices amongst online agencies. Tim MacDonald, senior vice president and general manager, Expedia.com adds:
“Expedia.com is committed to helping travelers find the broadest range of ‘green’ properties in the industry, the recent inclusion of Hilton Worldwide’s brands, that use the LightStay system, in Expedia.com’s Green Hotel Program helps fulfill that commitment.”
Expedia expect the choices to grow rapidly in the years ahead as the immportance of a hotel’s practices will soon be akin to their overall facilities and locations as travelers place this ever higher on their list of needs. The company are partnering with a non profit called Sustainable Travel International.org to build even more inroads within the marketplace. Expedia explain part of the approach more fully beneath:
Find green hotels that balance environmental protection and social responsibility—without sacrificing your comfort. Together with Sustainable Travel International, we’ve pinpointed the green hotels that are pioneering green travel practices. Green travel—also known as responsible travel, sustainable travel, eco-tourism, and geotourism—is redefining the travel industry. Hotels and other tourism companies are being challenged to do business in an increasingly environmentally friendly, socially responsible way. This growing demand has spurred many hotels, both large and small, to implement green business practices. To recognize these green hotels, each striving toward the three main areas of sustainability—environmental protection, socio-cultural responsibility, and local economic growth—we’ve compiled a list with the help of Sustainable Travel International!
The example of newly added Hilton’s measurements are a clear indicator of how individual proprerties will be assessed as over 200 operational practices are measured, including housekeeping, paper product usage, food waste, chemical storage, air quality and transportation. Expedia’s purchasing power also means that people who book green are also getting the best available deals for the hotels in question which makes the choice that much easier.
To learn much more about Expedia’s green hotel program please visit for the specific details on their site – or better still bookmark it and use it the next time you travel!!
Tags: booking a green hotels, eco friendly travel, eco friendly vacations, eco-friendly hotels, environmentall friendly hotel choices, expedia, expedia green hotel, expedia.com, Green hotels, hilton worldwide, planet forward, Recycling, save energy, sustainable hotels, water consumption
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Tim
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Good evening or good morning depending on when you read this and welcome back to the green gazette, my attempt at finding eco-events, inventions and intentions then wrapping them all up with a red bow on a blog post. I’m feeling vaguely festive today so with a good mood being something you should never spurn I’ll not talk about the Copenhagen Climate Summit tonight but instead chronicle some of that event later in the week. Instead let’s look at some of the happier news in terms of the environment.
I may have mentioned part of this once before (forgive me) but I’m really impressed with these two resources that are useful additions to any
eco-conscious consumer. ‘I Stay Green’ is building up an ever expanding database of hotels throughout the world and evaluates them based upon eco-initiatives and practices that the property has implemented. Hotels are such a large consumer of resources that considerations about where you stay should be made when book a room and this site helps you achieve that. Another directory I think is quite brilliant is Ecovian who are building up an impressive resource for eco-friendly retailers, restaurants and service providers. From pet shops to roof construction (bad dog pun built in) Ecovian is a great data source for many cities in the States. Each business that applies is evaluated based on a variety of eco-criteria so you can learn more about them. Its especially good for restaurants.
Seems that the new film Avatar is getting very positive reviews and is on target to be the box office leader this weekend. Many reviews are suggesting that there is a strong environmental message within the film also so I’ll need to find out about that for you. The premise sounds a lot like Dances with Wolves to me (although naturally set in a Science Fiction world and not the great plains). I’m curious to see it for the special effects but hopefully there will be a plot too? If it takes a Sci-Fi premise to engage more people in environmental concerns than who am I to argue, the cinema still holds great capacity in reflecting our culture and raising awareness so I’ll applaud the concept.
Normally I don’t think sharing news from 2008 is terribly helpful when 2009 is heading to its conclusion but I came across this story just this week and it made me recoil when I read it. My reaction was two-fold so let me explain myself, China in 2008 announced and enacted a nationwide ban on plastic bags from retailers!! Its still in place today and has been an anticipated success from a environmental and economic perspective. The initial story appears via this post on The Daily Green which appeared in January 2008. It won’t come as a surprise to learn that
China’s 1.33 billion population led the planet in plastic bag use in 2007 and making such a bold effort has huge positive implications. This follow up article on Blomberg from this year details the amazing results seem from the ban. Estimates are that 3 million metric tons of oil a year (which in turn may cut carbon emissions by a remarkable 9+ million tonnes) both of these results are quite inspiring, hence my reaction. I was amazed that China had implemented such a strong rule nationwide. My understanding is that ‘free’ plastic bags were banned and plastic bags could only be purchased (quite expensively). Part two of my reaction was why not here also? It’s not that draconian, it doesn’t infringe on civil liberties and it makes a fantastic difference to our environment. Shouldn’t our governments in North America and Europe be able to duplicate these efforts? Can we at least have these ideas appear in referendums? I know the San Francisco bay area has made a plastic bag ban operational with more bans to follow in Southern California but why stop there? People might feel inconvenienced for five minutes by needing to purchase a reusable bag but what a small price to pay to make positive impacts to climate change and fossil fuel waste. Come on ‘The West’ we can do more…we should do more.
Tags: avatar, avatar's green message, china bans plastic bags, Copenhagen Climate Summit, dances with wolves, eco friendly businesses, eco-friendly hotels, ecovian, Green hotels, i stay green, national ban on plastic bags, planet forward, plastic bag reduction, resuable bags
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Tim
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Welcome back to a new edition of the Green Gazette. As I type this I noticed the date is Nov 5th, this used to be my favourite night of the year as a kid. A drizzly rain and standing in the cold looking up at the sky waiting for colour and noise. If you wonder what I’m rambling about just check this link to Guy Fawkes night. Anyway enough of that, let’s see what Green news is worthy today….there are some good ones!
Well with it being November it’s a good reminder that Christmas is just 8 weeks away and if children are part of your world then some toys are in
order (for the well behaved). Reuters published this list of the top ten eco-friendly gifts for children which is worth your perusal. The full list has a number of good ideas but amongst my favourites are:
Desert Hothouse: This kit includes seeds for Cacti and Succulents, gravel, sand and a mini greenhouse. The price is right and your child can have an eco-friendly slice of Arizona wherever they might live.
Hugg-A-Planet: Pretty much as it sounds, a soft educational ‘earth’ which helps little ones learn about islands, oceans, rivers and more. Educational if not as appealing as a furry bunny.
Recycle Truck: Little lads and lasses love a truck at the best of times, so this one is a recycling truck made entirely from recycled milk containers. Activism can start as young as age three! The truck has a sortable container and no metal parts.
From there we head to New York City where the NY Presbyterian hospital has officially transferred it’s power source to a green one. With the
addition of the power from the new plant, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center will generate between 60 percent and 100 percent of its own electricity. Hospitals (like factories) are huge energy consumers and the changes made at this facility equate to reductions in carbon emissions equivalent to taking 3,600 vehicles off of the streets. The 7.5-megawatt power plant burns natural gas in a turbine to generate electricity continuously for 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Heat from the turbine, which is usually wasted as exhaust gas, is captured and reused to generate steam for heating and cooling.
I enjoyed this article as it’s both a fantastic idea but also a topic I find truly interesting. Living in the desert southwest people often mistake a perfect green lawn and well maintained shrubs
as a sign of an eco-friendly home or business. The reality is that a green lawn can take so muc maintenance in energy and chemicals (golf courses take note) that nothing could be further from the truth. This article in the Washington Times brings awareness to a new organization that will make a true and impact driven assessment of a property to establish how well it performs/can perform on a ‘green scale’. Part of the initiative’s mission is educating the nation about little-known sustainable-landscape practices. The ‘Sustainable Sites Initiative’ will rate and benchmark a variety of locations that are eligible. It’s bold, ambitious and can make a real change in the way a landscape (even if it’s our own garden) can be more efficient. According to a 2008 survey conducted by the American Society of Landscape Architects, 96 percent of U.S. adults have instituted some type of sustainable or energy-efficient measure at home, but just 58 percent use energy or water-saving techniques in their yard or garden.
A final quick story that I will expand upon soon as I think it is really useful for those who travel often. The Sutton Place hotel in Toronto has just become the 1,000th hotel certified under the ISTAYGREEN program. More about this soon…it’s really cool.
Tags: American Society of Landscape Architects, carbon emissions, carbon reduction, desert hothouse, eco friendly toys, Green hotels, i stay green, istaygreen, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, planet forward, recycling truck, reneweable energy, Sustainable sites initiative, toys from recycled goods, Weill Cornell Medical Center