Skip to main content

Banning mini shampoos from hotels won’t really reduce plastic or save the environment

[ad_1]

The movement to ban miniature toiletries isn’t likely to make a dent in the global plastic crisis.

The movement to ban miniature toiletries isn’t likely to make a dent in the global plastic crisis. (vaidehi shah/Flickr, CC BY/)

InterContinental Hotels Group will replace mini-shampoos and conditioners with bulk products by the year 2021. Marriott Hotels recently followed suit, vowing to ban miniature toiletries by next year.

But environmental activists shouldn't rejoice just yet.

These announcements are yet another example—such as banning plastic straws, false sustainability claims, and corporate commitments that are far in the future—that seem to be more of a PR exercise than real attempts to move the needle.

I'm a professor of engineering and the director of the MIT Center of Transportation and Logistics. As I argue in my book *Balancing Green: When to Embrace Sustainability in a Business (And When Not To*), announcements of these kinds distract us from legitimate—and more challenging—measures we need to put in place to avoid environmental catastrophe.

Behind the headlines

InterContinental Hotels Group CEO Keith Barr says that replacing miniature bathroom products "will allow us to significantly reduce our waste footprint and environmental impact" at the conglomerate's hotel chains, which include InterContinental, Crowne Plaza, and Holiday Inn.

It's true that the British foundation Clear Conscience estimates that 200 million travel-size toiletries end up in U.K. landfills every year. But there's another motivation: With 5,600 hotels, the savings for IHG can mount to over $11 million annually.

Additionally, studies we've carried out at MIT and elsewhere show that evaluations of a product's environmental impact can mislead if economists don't consider the entire supply chain management process.

For example, most of the carbon footprint of companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Cisco comes from the suppliers who actually make the iPhones, routers, and Xboxes, not directly from the company itself.

Additionally, the net reduction in discarded plastic could be minimal at best if the larger containers are filled from single-use plastic pouches. Also, we don't know if the larger containers are recyclable, nor what the cost and environmental impacts of making, transporting, installing and maintaining them.

Even if replacing miniature toiletries does reduce waste somewhat—as other hotel chains join the movement and California moves to ban them—a transition to bulk products will barely put a dent in the plastic waste that now clogs the planet's rivers and oceans. It is another "feel good" initiative which help avoid the move to more serious actions that can actually make a difference.

Banning plastic straws is another such example. While outlawing plastic straws makes for excellent public relations copy, it has virtually no impact on the global accumulation of plastic garbage.

McDonald’s and other organizations plan to replace plastic straws with paper ones.
McDonald’s and other organizations plan to replace plastic straws with paper ones. (Reuters/Toby Melville/)

Skin-deep support

At least the hotel chains are responding to consumers' professed increasing support for green products and services, right?

Some studies find that more than 80 percent of consumers say they will make personal sacrifices to address social and environmental issues. However, when actually buying goods, consumer support for environmental products largely evaporates.

To try to explain the gap between what people say and how much they're willing to pay, my students and I observed consumers' choices in supermarkets in Boston.

These supermarkets presented sustainable choices in large green frames around the sustainable products—detergents, soaps, paper products and others—alongside “regular” products in the same aisle. Fewer than 10 percent of consumers chose the sustainable products, though the study found somewhat higher percentages among highly educated and higher income consumers. The sustainable products were, by and large, between 5 and 7 percent more expensive.

Given customer ambivalence toward paying for green products, companies engage in token measures that insulate them from damage to their reputations and the unwanted attention of environmental groups, which could lead to NGO and media complaints or consumer boycotts and lost sales.

Beyond that, brands will reclassify cost-cutting initiatives such as energy savings as sustainability initiatives.

One good way to green hotels is to restrict hotels' use of energy-thirsty air conditioning. Another is to charge guests for not reusing towels rather than imploring them to reuse these items.

Granted, a slogan that states "our hotel will not keep rooms cooler than 75 degrees in the summer and no warmer than 65 degrees in the winter" may not increase a hotel's market share. Even the replacement of the small shampoo bottles with bulk dispensers is leading to consumers' apprehension.

InterContinental Hotels Group is considering flushing their mini-toiletries down the drain and replacing them with bulk items.
InterContinental Hotels Group is considering flushing their mini-toiletries down the drain and replacing them with bulk items. (KR_Netez/Shutterstock.com/)

Futile gestures

Perhaps the most damaging fallout from symbolic corporate green “feel-good” initiatives is that they distract from actions that can make a difference.

More specifically, companies could focus their efforts on carbon-reducing technology. No existing technologies are available on a global scale, but a small example of such a successful international agreement is the Montreal Protocol to ban substances that deplete the ozone layer.

Governments could implement adaptation measures for the changing climate such as planning for changes in food production patterns and the massive migration that may follow. An example of a comprehensive adaption strategy is the work of the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency.

In a world where companies engage in tokenism to satisfy their customers’ false green preferences, the efforts by Marriott and InterContinental are perfectly acceptable. But that world is likely to be short lived.


Yossi Sheffi is a Professor of Engineering; Director of the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This article was originally featured on The Conversation.

The Conversation



[ad_2]

Written By By Yossi Sheffi/The Conversation

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ice technicians are the secret stars of the Winter Olympics

[ad_1] The emphasis of this year's two-week-long Winter Olympic Games has been placed squarely on the Olympians themselves. After all, the stated purpose of the international competition is to bring together the world’s greatest athletes in a nail-biting competition across fifteen different winter sports. But before the curlers, skiers, and skaters even arrived in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Olympians of the ice technician world were already a few weeks deep in a competition of their own. Mark Callan of the World Curling Federation and Markus Aschauer of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation both say they’re hoping to make the best ice the Winter Olympics have ever seen. To transform the barren concrete jungle of existing tracks and arenas into an ice- and snow-covered wonderland is an enormous undertaking. And it takes a keen understanding of the physics and chemistry that keeps frozen precipitation pristine. Curling Callan has been making and maintaining ic...

How to avoid the mid-movie bathroom break

[ad_1] Long movies and the urge to pee have been linked since the early days of cinema. Sixty-three years before Avengers: Endgame and its three-hour runtime, moviegoers settled in for nearly four hours of The Ten Commandments . “There will be an intermission,” director Cecil B. DeMille announced during the movie’s introduction. And audiences’ bladders were relieved. On average, movies aren’t getting longer, but they also don’t come with a predetermined bathroom break. That means when nature calls, you’ve got to either sit in growing discomfort or gamble on the best time to run to the restroom. But it doesn’t have to be this way, and for most people, setting your body to “do not disturb” is fairly simple. Go before the show The first piece of advice is also the easiest: pee before the movie starts. Generally, healthy adults urinate every 3-4 hours, so the longer a movie runs, the more urgent it becomes to reset your internal p...

Charted: Here's how much your food waste hurts the environment

[ad_1] Our species is pretty good at wasting food. Some we discard at the farm for being undersized or oddly shaped. Others we allow to decay in their shipping containers, thrown away before they even reach shelves. We leave even more foodstuffs wasting away in grocery stores, often by letting it sit there until it reaches its sell-by date. As consumers, we don’t have much control over most of the process that brings our food to the grocery store, but we do have control over how much food we personally waste. Let's face it: We’ve all found liquified lettuce in our veggie drawers. Don't fret. It's arguably impossible to consume 100 percent of the food we buy. But a healthy reminder of the effect food waste has on the environment might help us all to be more conscious of the amount of food we eat—and don't eat. Consumer food waste varies extensively depending on the area. In South and Southeast Asia, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates that only around ...