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Research from the Global Business Travel Association highlights perceptions, priorities and actionable opportunities for a more sustainable business travel programme
advanced in sustainability, improvements are being made as 76 per cent of travel buyers have already incorporated or are planning to incorporate sustainability objectives in their travel policies.
“There’s no longer the debate whether we should engage in sustainable actions for business travel, but how we turn ambition into action. Investing in sustainable solutions must be part of our game plan today to make sure we can still connect people and travel for business tomorrow. This is only possible if our industry joins forces across our full value chain and with external stakeholders including governments, to adopt ambitious targets, drive green investments and accelerate the uptake of clean technologies,” said Delphine Millot, Senior Vice President for GBTA’s Sustainability Program.
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GBTA’s State of Sustainability report highlighted the top challenges faced by the business travel industry in its journey towards sustainability. These include higher costs (82 per cent) and a lack of transparent information and data (63 per cent). The report also revealed that key enablers included fostering change in industry culture (63 per cent) and improved access to sustainability data (63 per cent).
Sustainability Toolkit
“To guide business travel managers in their own sustainability journeys, GBTA has designed a Sustainability Toolkit. It empowers businesses to partner with their colleagues, employees and suppliers to reduce the climate impact of business travel,” said Catherine Logan, Regional Vice President – EMEA & APAC at GBTA.
The toolkit is built around a five-step process: understand, set, implement, involve and evaluate. It encourages businesses to understand decarbonisation strategies and greener travel policies to identify which ones might be more impactful than others; set goals and milestone targets in the short, medium and long term; implement the measures by working across sustainability, travel, HR and finance; involve employees by discussing sustainability goals and their contributions and, finally, to evaluate travel policies and decarbonisation strategies to make necessary adjustments.
Effective Solutions
Highlighting strategies that have proved most effective for the business travel industry, Logan said: “Many businesses are tracking and reporting on their Scope 3.6 (business travel) emissions publicly. Some are setting emissions reduction targets for 2030 and 2050.
“Many companies are incentivising their employees to travel in a more climate-friendly manner, either through travel policies or through activations on their online booking tool. They are also implementing sustainability performance vetting mechanisms for their business travel suppliers and are integrating clauses into their contracts to ensure suppliers meet basic sustainability criteria.
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“Several have also purchased carbon offsets to compensate for their emissions, but some are now starting to invest in the uptake of sustainable aviation fuel instead.”
To help businesses gain further insight into the best practices for a green travel programme, GBTA has launched a benchmarking report. Later this year, the association will also introduce a suppliers matrix, with a framework for corporates to assess the sustainability of suppliers.