The Standard (St. Catharines)

Something missing in your hotel room: Where are those tiny bottles of bath gel?

Hotel chains worldwide eliminatin­g small-size items in crackdown on plastic

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

It could be lights out for tiny toiletries.

Marriott Internatio­nal, the world’s largest hotel chain, said Wednesday it will eliminate small plastic bottles of shampoo, conditione­r and bath gel from its hotel rooms worldwide by December 2020.

They’ll be replaced with larger bottles or wall-mounted dispensers, depending on the hotel.

The move follows a similar announceme­nt last month by IHG, which owns Holiday Inn, Kimpton and other brands.

IHG said it will eliminate about 200 million tiny bottles each year by 2021.

Last year, Walt Disney Co. said it would replace small plastic shampoo bottles at its resorts and on its cruise ships.

Many smaller companies, like the five Soneva Resorts in Thailand and the Maldives, have also ditched plastic bottles.

Marriott has more than 7,000 hotels in 131 countries under 30 brands, ranging from SpringHill Suites and Residence Inn to Sheraton and Ritz-Carlton.

It says it will be eliminatin­g about 500 million small bottles each year, or 1.7 million pounds of plastic.

Marriott has wanted to get rid of small bottles for years, said president and CEO Arne Sorenson. There are just too many of them, he said, and they’re difficult to recycle because of the time it takes to clean them out.

But it took a lot of work to design tamper-resistant large bottles and get suppliers on board. High-end hotels, in particular, needed to have bottles that still felt luxurious, he said.

“There were a lot of technical features to this that we had to get right,” he said.

Rival Hyatt Hotels Corp. is going through a similar process now. The company says it’s been testing amenity dispensers in some rooms for the last year.

Bethesda, Md.-based Marriott started replacing small bottles early last year at some North American brands, including Courtyard and Fairfield hotels.

About 1,000 of those now feature larger bottles or pump dispensers that are hooked to the shower wall.

Denise Naguib, Marriott’s vice-president of sustainabi­lity and supplier diversity, said Marriott got a positive response from guest surveys. Many were relieved because the larger bottles let them use as much or as little shampoo as they want.

“More and more people have a general consciousn­ess of it,” she said. “They don’t want to be leaving half-empty bottles.”

Naguib said most Marriott hotels will eliminate small bottles by July 1, 2020.

Luxury brands will get rid of them by the end of 2020. Lower-priced brands will have dispensers or bottles that are tethered to the shower wall.

Luxury brands will have untethered bottles. The bottles hold the equivalent of 10 to 12 small bottles, and all are tamper resistant.

The larger bottles will still be plastic, and Marriott still plans to replace them — not just refill them — when they run low. But Naguib said the larger bottles are easier to recycle than smaller ones.

Environmen­tal groups are applauding the moves.

“Plastic pollution is an urgent global crisis and the time is now to think ’reusable’ instead of ’disposable,’” said Dianna Cohen, co-founder and CEO of the Berkeley, California-based Plastic Pollution Coalition.

Soon, hotels may not have a choice. Lawmakers in California are considerin­g banning hotels from using small shampoo bottles in 2023.

And the European Union is banning a wide range of single-use plastic items, like cutlery and plates, by 2021.

Sorenson said he expects some complaints, like Marriott heard last year when it banned plastic straws and stirrers. Many people like collecting hotel shampoo bottles, he said.

His own mother used to have a drawer full of soap she took from hotels.

“Human nature is what it is and we resist change,” he said. “But people understand that this is so much better.”

 ?? DAN HUFF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marriott Internatio­nal, the world's largest hotel chain, said Wednesday it will replace small plastic bottles of shampoo with larger bottles or wall-mounted dispensers like these.
DAN HUFF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marriott Internatio­nal, the world's largest hotel chain, said Wednesday it will replace small plastic bottles of shampoo with larger bottles or wall-mounted dispensers like these.

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