Our hotels serve 150 million meals a year. Because we are also restaurateurs, because today’s food model is not sustainable, and because our guests want quality food products, we must take concrete action regarding food, which is a high-stakes issue for our Group. Our Goal? To offer our guests healthy, sustainable food and also to eliminate food waste.
Amir Nahai Chief Food & Beverage officer
We feed our guests like we would feed our own kids, in a responsible way
Our commitments for 2020
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-30% food waste
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100% of our restaurants follow our charter on healthy & sustainable food
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1,000 urban vegetable gardens in our hotels
Ethical
liters of water are needed to produce 1kg of meat
If you throw away one loaf of bread, you are wasting 100 liters of water...
Food & beverage: Is the second largest contributor to our carbon footprint: Accounts for 50% of the waste generated by our hotels: Food waste, used food oils and fats. Or an annual average of: For example, a lot of our hotels find ingenious ways of reusing food produce that has not been consumed in other recipes to avoid throwing it away. Here are a few examples: Specifically, each type of food waste will be weighed and valued (according to its cost price). The total waste value will be calculated relative to the restaurant revenue, in order to account for variations in business. The 30% reduction will concern this ratio. In 2015, we tested a digital tool of this kind, commercialized by a start-up, in some of our luxury hotels. We are currently continuing these tests in the hotels operating under the Group’s other brands. The Sofitel Bangkok Sukhumvit in Thailand is one of the pilot hotels that implemented an external food waste measuring and monitoring system and a food waste reduction action plan We have three reasons for doing this
Every year, more than 30% of world food production is lost or wasted. Less than a quarter of this wasted food would suffice to eliminate hunger, which affects 792 million people (1).
Environmental
Given the water consumption, use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, etc. farming takes a heavy toll on the environment, and also contributes significantly to our own footprint. Hence the need minimize waste.
Economical
In the hotel and restaurant industries, an estimated 25% of food purchases are thrown away. This waste represents between 4% and 12% of the food revenue generated by the industry (2).If we reduce this waste, we also reduce our hotels’ expenses.(1) SOURCE : FAO — (2) SOURCE : WINNOW
FIND OUT MORE ABOUT THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS OF FARMING
TO PAINT A CLEARER PICTURE
16,000
1
Food & beverages, a key means of
reducing our environmental impactTHE FOOD AND DRINK CONSUMED IN OUR HOTELS IS ONE OF THE THREE MAIN AREAS WHERE OUR GROUP CAN TAKE ACTION TO REDUCE ITS IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT.
Is the largest contributor to our biodiversity footprint:
It accounts for 88% of our impact on flora and fauna, mostly during the farming stage.
Is the largest contributor to our water footprint:
It represents 40% of our global water consumption, mostly due to crop irrigation and livestock farming.
It is responsible for 79% of our impact on the eutrophication of seawater: the proliferation of algae as a result of the use of nitrate-rich fertilizers in crop farming.
More than 10% of our global CO2 emissions come principally from the transport of merchandise and from livestock farming to produce meat and dairy products.
FIND OUT MORE ABOUT OUR ENVIRONMENTAL FOOTPRINT
What we are doing already
TO AVOID WASTE, EVERY INITIATIVE COUNTS.
WITH A LITTLE CREATIVITY, WE HAVE OBTAINED ENCOURAGING RESULTS.
What we plan to do over the next five years
FIRST, LET’S TAKE THE RIGHT MEASURES. WE WILL MEASURE FOOD WASTE. WE PLEDGE TO REDUCE FOOD WASTE BY 30% BY 2020.
This is the first step we will take to help foster virtuous practices in our hotels.
To achieve this, we will gradually provide them with the necessary tools so they can:
Then, let’s activate all the available levers to prevent waste at the source.
For example, let’s:
COSTS HALVED
AFTER FOUR MONTHS, IT HAD ACHIEVED
Participate in the fight against obesity, diabetes and other food-related illnesses which have become a real public health problem. At the end of 2017, almost all of our hotels had removed endangered marine species from their menus: Bluefin tuna, swordfish, shark, ray, etc. 98% highlighted the healthy dishes on their menus. 60% sourced their products locally. In Poland All our hotels serve Rainforest Alliance Certified tea. This label guarantees that the product is sourced from sustainably managed farms. In Romania The Novotel Bucharest City Center has an Organic Corner for its guests featuring yoghurt, soya milk, honey and especially apple juice made with fruit from local orchards supported by our Plant for the Planet program. Sofitel's DE-LIGHTconcept Sofitel’s healthy and tasty dining DE-LIGHT concept launched in 2013 has been successfully exported to all the Sofitel properties. Cooking staff are trained by nutritionists. This healthy, well-balanced menu is made using local produce and addresses a key guest expectation. The AccorHotels healthy and sustainable food Charter focuses the Group’s goal and its pledges on three priorities: Across the world, it means that hotels commit, for example, to:Our Group serves 150 million meals a year worldwide.
This means we have a dual responsibility to:
Assist the shift towards more sustainable food models.
The growing taste for local produce and seasonal fruit and vegetables; the preference for short supply chains, the development of organic farming and fair trade, etc. are examples of the growing number of signs which point to an agricultural revolution.
The challenges are well-known:
To paint a clearer picture
Our guests are very keen on responsible food. What appeals to them most?
94%
healthy food
73%
local produce
59%
seasonal produce
56%
organic produce
SOURCE: ACCORHOTELS STUDY 2016 RESPONSIBLE GUEST SEEKS SUSTAINABLE HOTEL
What we are doing already
A few examples in Eastern Europe:
Novotel establishments are developing a range of products certified by external organizations. All of them already offer organic wine and tea. The Novotel Warsaw Airport will soon produce its own honey. Mercure addresses also offer organic wines and local and seasonal vegetables. Lastly, a large number of certified local producers have become referenced suppliers. We have sent this supplier list to our restaurants.What we plan to do over the next five years
> FIND OUT MORE ON OUR HEALTHY AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD CHARTER
Solutions are emerging everywhere to bring these two worlds closer together: Various techniques are used to boost the performance of urban farming: Benefits are large: 650m2 of vegetables, fruit, flowers and herbs, a henhouse, 4 beehives: It is probably the biggest vegetable garden in Paris. In the Kitchen, in the spring, summer and autumn, the chef adjusts his menus according to the morning’s harvest. At the bar, the herbs add original flavors to the cocktails. The fresh eggs are favorites at Sunday brunch. However, to be included in our list, they will have to meet certain criteria: minimum cultivation surface area, production of vegetables for food consumption, regular maintenance, etc. The vegetables, fruit, herbs and edible flowers that they will produce will feature in the restaurant menus, in the bar cocktails or in our spas’ aromatic oils and herbal teas. Developing urban farming is one of the great challenges facing us in the coming years.
Our responsibility lies in assisting this change, at our own level.
To paint a clearer picture
1
One in two guests thinks creating vegetable gardens in our hotels is a good idea
70%
of the global population will live in cities by 2050 (source UNO)
1/4
Agriculture accounts for ¼ of global CO2 emissions (source FAO)
Urban agriculture helps meet these challenges.
What we are doing already
Some of our hotels are already leading the way and have created a vegetable garden.
Example: the Pullman Paris Tour Eiffel, in the heart of the French capital
It provides a daily supply of fresh produce for the hotel’s restaurant with a yield of 500kg of fruit and vegetables. It also provides shelter for biodiversity.What we plan to do over the next five years
Our hotels’ 1,000 urban vegetable gardens could come in different formats, large or small, traditional or avant-garde.
They will be adapted to the hotel context and space limitations:
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