Global Times - Weekend

Making a change

On the Thai island, hotel guests check out of plastic waste

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For

the millions of sun seekers who head to Thailand’s resort island of Phuket each year in search of stunning beaches and clear waters, cutting down on waste may not be a top priority.

But the island’s hotel associatio­n is hoping to change that with a series of initiative­s aimed at reducing the use of plastic, tackling the garbage that washes up on its shores, and educating staff, local communitie­s and tourists alike.

“Hotels unchecked are huge consumers and users of single-use plastics,” said Anthony Lark, president of the Phuket Hotels Associatio­n and managing director of the Trisara resort.

“Every resort in Southeast Asia has a plastic problem. Until we all make a change, it’s going to get worse and worse,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Establishe­d in 2016 and with about 70 members – including all Phuket’s five-star hotels – the associatio­n has put tackling environmen­tal issues high on its to-do list.

Last year the group surveyed members’ plastics use and then began looking at ways to shrink their plastics footprint.

As part of this, three months ago the associatio­n’s hotels committed to phase out, or put plans in place to stop using plastic water bottles and plastic drinking straws by 2019.

About five years ago, Lark’s own resort with about 40 villas used to dump into landfill about 250,000 plastic water bottles annually. It has now switched to reusable glass bottles.

The hotel associatio­n also teamed up with the documentar­y makers of

and now show an edited version with Thai subtitles for staff training. Meanwhile hotel employees and local school children take part in regular beach clean-ups. “The associatio­n is involved in good and inclusive community-based action, rather than just hotel general managers getting together for a drink,” Lark said.

Creators and victims

Phuket, like Bali in Indonesia and Boracay in the Philippine­s, has become a top holiday destinatio­n in Southeast Asia – and faces similar challenges.

Of a similar size to Singapore and at the geographic­al heart of Southeast Asia, Phuket is easily accessible to tourists from China, India, Malaysia and Australia.

With its white sandy beaches and infamous nightlife, Phuket attracts about 10 million visitors each year, media reports say, helping make the Thai tourism industry one of the few bright spots in an otherwise lackluster economy.

Popular with holiday makers and retirees, Phuket – like many other Southeast Asian resorts – must contend with traffic congestion, poor water management and patchy waste collection services.

Despite these persistent problems, hotels in the region need to follow Phuket’s lead and step up action to cut their dependence on plastics, said Susan Ruffo, a managing director at the US-based non-profit group Ocean Conservanc­y.

Worldwide, between 8 million and 15 million tons of plastic are dumped in the ocean every year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain, UN Environmen­t says.

Five Asian countries – China, Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Thailand – account for up to 60 percent of plastic waste leaking into the seas, an Ocean Conservanc­y study found.

“As both creators and ‘victims’ of waste, the hotel industry has a lot to gain by making efforts to control their own waste and helping their guests do the same,” Ruffo said.

“We are seeing more and more resorts and chains start to take action, but there is a lot more to be done, particular­ly in the area of ensuring that hotel waste is properly collected and recycled,” she added.

Changing minds, cutting costs

Data on how much plastic is used by hotels and the hospitalit­y industry is hard to find. But packaging accounts for up to 40 percent of an establishm­ent’s waste stream, according to a 2011 study by The Travel Foundation, a UK-based charity.

Water bottles, shampoo bottles, toothbrush­es and even food delivered by room service all tend to use throwaway plastics.

In the past, the hospitalit­y industry has looked at how to use less water and energy, said Von Hernandez, global coordinato­r at the “Break Free From Plastic” movement in Manila.

Now hotels are turning their attention to single-use plastics amid growing public awareness about damage to oceans.

“A lot of hotels are doing good work around plastics”, adopting measures to eliminate or shrink their footprint, said Hernandez.

But hotels in Southeast Asia often have to contend with poor waste management and crumbling infrastruc­ture.

“I’ve seen resorts in Bali that pay staff to rake the beach every morning to get rid of plastic, but then they either dig a hole, and bury it or burn it on the beach,” said Ruffo. “Those are not effective solutions, and can lead to other issues.”

Hotels should look at providing reusable water containers and refill stations, giving guests metal or bamboo drinking straws and bamboo toothbrush­es, and replacing single-use soap and shampoo containers with

refillable dis- pensers, experts said.

“Over time, this could actually lower their operationa­l costs – it could give them savings,” said Hernandez. “It could help change mindsets of people, so that when they go back to their usual lives, they have a little bit of education.”

Back in Phuket, the hotel associatio­n is exploring ways to cut plastic waste further, and will host its first regional forum on environmen­tal awareness next month.

The hope is that what the group has learned over the last two years can be implemente­d at other Southeast Asian resorts and across the wider community.

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 ?? Photos: VCG ?? From top: Charon Temple in Phuket, Thailand Phuket Island, Thailand
Photos: VCG From top: Charon Temple in Phuket, Thailand Phuket Island, Thailand

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