Ricaurte, Eric, and Rehmaashini Jagarajan. "Hotel Sustainability Benchmarking Index 2020: Carbon, Energy, and Water". Cornell Center for Hospitality Research. (1636761600)November 13, 2021. https://ecommons.cornell.edu/...
The Cornell Hotel Sustainability Benchmarking Index (CHSB) is the hotel industry’s largest annual benchmarking of energy, water, and carbon emissions. It is an industry-led global data collection and benchmarking initiative, with more than 18,000 hotels contributing information on their energy and water usage and greenhouse gas emissions. Open to hotels and hotel companies of all sizes, including major hotel brands, operators and owners, 55 nations and 20 international hotel chains representing all regions of the world participated. Published annually, it is freely available and offers a peer-based reference for benchmarking and estimating hotel energy and water usage and carbon footprints.
Posted on 16/11/21
Recent Abstracts
- Ho, Oanh Thi-Kieu, and Usha Iyer-Raniga. "Life Cycle Costing: Evaluate Sustainability Outcomes for Building and Construction Sector".
Springer Nature Switzerland.
2022.
https://www.researchgate.net/...
Life-cycle cost (LCC) is the sum of all costs related to the life cycle of a building from investment to its deconstruction. For a sustainable building, it is anticipated that the environmental impacts associated with the design, construction, and operation of this building are lower than conventional construction. LCC is typically used for assessing energy efficiency or determining energy impacts in building projects. Comprehensive life-cycle costing is recognized through life-cycle sustainability assessment (LCSA), which comprises the three measurement techniques of environmental life-cycle assessment (LCA), environmental life-cycle costing (LCC), and social LCA (SLCA). Despite the limitations of scope, LCC is an effective approach for assessing SDG-targeted sustainability outcomes.Posted on 25/04/24
- Baskin, Kara. "The state of supply chain sustainability".
MIT Sloan School of Management.
(December 14, 2023).
https://mitsloan.mit.edu/...
This report published by MIT Sloan defines supply chain sustainability as “the management of environmental and social impacts within and across networks consisting of suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, and customers.” The five key takeaways from the report, which captures a turbulent world that continues to grapple with the complex goal of sustainability, are (1) Commitment to supply chain sustainability appears to be resilient to certain types of crises but vulnerable to others; (2) Sustainability commitments aren’t consistent across supply chains and around the world, (3) Pressure to increase supply chain sustainability comes from multiple quarters; (4) Pressure to increase supply chain sustainability comes from multiple quarters, (5) Many firms have no net-zero goals.Posted on 24/04/24
- Laila Mendy, Mikael Karlsson and Daniel Lindvall. "Counteracting climate denial: A systematic review".
Sage Publications.
(January 20, 2024).
https://journals.sagepub.com/...
Despite overwhelming scientific consensus on climate change, climate denial is still widespread. While much research has characterized climate denial, comparatively fewer studies have systematically examined how to counteract it. This review fills this gap by exploring the research about counteracting climate denial, the effectiveness and the intentions behind intervention. Through a systematic selection and analysis of 65 scientific articles, this review finds multiple intervention forms, including education, message framing and inoculation. The intentions of intervening range from changing understanding of climate science, science advocacy, influencing mitigation attitudes and counteracting vested industry. The review offers guiding questions for counteracting climate denialism.Posted on 23/04/24
- Pucker, Kenneth P., and Andrew King. "ESG Investing isn’t Designed to Save the Planet".
Harvard Business Review.
(August 01, 2022).
https://hbr.org/...
Erroneously, ESG (environmental, social, and governance) investing is widely assumed to reward companies for helping the planet. However, ESG ratings, which underlie ESG fund selection, are based on the impact the changing world has on companies’ profit and loss. Asset managers have deliberately allowed the confusion to go unrefuted and even encourage it since ESG funds are highly popular and come with higher management fees. The harm is that ESG investing leads policymakers to believe that the market can remedy the threatened environmental and socioeconomic disaster while only prompt significant government intervention can avert imminent climate catastrophe.Posted on 22/04/24
- Cammarano, Antonello, Mirko Perano, Francesca Michelino, Claudio Del Regno, and Mauro Caputo. "SDG-Oriented Supply Chains: Business Practices for Procurement and Distribution".
Sustainability.
(January 25, 2022).
https://www.mdpi.com/...
Sustainable practices can be implemented within supply chains to support the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). Procurement and distribution processes can be reengineered by implementing sustainable approaches that consider the environmental, social and economic dimensions of sustainability. SDG-oriented supply chains demonstrate a positive relationship between sustainable development and supply-chain performance enhancement. There are differences in the number of opportunities depend on the motivation for implementing them, industry and supply-chain processes, performance achieved, and SDGs pursued. Companies have many opportunities to support the 2030 Agenda and enhance their market and organizational performance when aligning their supply chains with the SDGs.Posted on 18/04/24
-
SAP.
"What Is a Sustainable Supply Chain?". Accessed December 21, 2021.
https://www.sap.com/...
A sustainable supply chain fully integrates ethical and environmentally responsible practices into a competitive and successful model. End-to-end supply chain transparency is essential for companies to demonstrate corporate social responsibility. Sustainability initiatives must extend from raw materials sourcing to last-mile logistics, product returns, and recycling processes. Digital transformation and the increasing sophistication of digital supply chain technologies play a major role in the evolution of supply chain sustainability. Big data management, advanced analytics, artificial intelligence (AI), and security tools have brought unprecedented visibility and accountability to global supply chains. Transparency and circularity characterize the sustainable supply chain.Posted on 18/04/24
- Moallemi, Enayat A, Edoardo Bertone, Sibel Eker, Lei Gao, Katrina Szetey, Nick Taylor, and Brett A Bryan. "A Review of Systems Modelling for Local Sustainability".
IOP Publishing.
(November 08, 2021).
https://www.researchgate.net/...
To counter destructive non-linear system responses, tipping points, and spillover effects, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) aim to transform the world towards societal well-being, economic prosperity, and environmental protection. Achieving the SDGs, however, is challenged by the performance of interconnected sectors and the complexity of their interactions. The SDGs are a holistic agenda intended to guide socioeconomic development policies and priorities, funding and government interventions at international, national, and local levels for their achievement. With the increasing adoption of the SDGs at all levels, systems models are also increasingly used for the sustainable development and operation of communities in support of planning for sustainability.Posted on 11/04/24
- Novak, Marijana, Blake Robinson, Max Russell, Angelica Greco, Marion Guénard, Olga Horn, Burcu Tuncer, et al.. "Circular City Actions Framework – Bringing the Circular Economy to Every City".
ICLEI – Local Governments for Sustainability.
"n.d."
https://circulars.iclei.org/...
A circular economy calls for collaboration among the public-, private, and third-sector (civil society) stakeholders and requires governments, businesses and communities to be creative and flexible. A circular community promotes an equitable transition to sustainability across the urban space through multiple city functions and departments in cross-sectoral collaboration with research institutions, local businesses, and community residents. The transition from a linear to a more circular economy offers cities the tools to support social equity, local job creation, public health, and community wealth. In a circular economy, existing materials that were once used in a product’s original life cycle are recycled and reused while minimizing disposable waste and natural resource extraction.Posted on 10/04/24
- John Cook. "The 97% consensus on global warming".
Skeptical Science.
(March 26, 2023).
https://skepticalscience.com/...
Despite claims to the contrary, 97% of climate experts agree that humans are causing global warming. In science, consensus is when the vast majority of experts agree on a fundamental principle. In climate science, more than 97% of experts agree that CO₂ traps heat and that adding it to the atmosphere warms the planet. Public perception of the scientific consensus concerning global warming is an important gateway into other enlightened climate-related attitudes, including policy support. This article looks at summaries of the key studies and into the degree of consensus based on analyses of large samples of peer-reviewed climate science literature or surveys of climate and Earth scientists. The slightly different methodologies used reached very similar conclusions.Posted on 08/04/24
- Mammitzsch, Julie. "Legal Rights of Nature".
HOPE Australia.
(April 01, 2023).
https://www-006.clevvi.com.au/...
Resulting from the Rights to Nature movement, Mount Taranaki on New Zealand's north island was granted rights equal to those of a human and assigned legal personhood in 2017. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted in 1948, enabling the protection and recognition of each person. Some say we need such rights for nature, to allow us to preserve sacred natural spaces. We need laws that enable individuals to claim nature’s rights since the environment can’t speak up for itself. One major barrier to such civic action and laws is that most land is private property and must be treated as such without legal consequences. Although interested in the protection and preservation of nature, many countries and communities are having difficulty granting such rights to their ecosystems.Posted on 01/04/24
- Szetey, Katrina, Enayat A. Moallemi, Emma Ashton, Martin Butcher, Beth Sprunt, and Brett A. Bryan. "Co-Creating Local Socioeconomic Pathways for Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals".
Sustainability Science.
(January 07, 2021).
https://doi.org/...
Local communities must focus on a locally-relevant subset of goals and understand potential future pathways for key drivers influencing local sustainability to contribute to overall national- and global-scale SDG achievement. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) recognize the importance of action across all scales and levels to achieve a sustainable future. A participatory method to co-create local socioeconomic pathways was developed by downscaling the SDGs and driving forces of the shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) through contextual analysis and community engagement. The SSPs and SDGs were linked by identifying the driving forces and describing how they affect the achievement of local SDGs.Posted on 13/08/23
- Wallace-Wells, David. "When Will Climate Change Make the Earth Too Hot For Humans?".
New York Magazine.
(July 10, 2017).
https://nymag.com/...
This essay is the result of numerous interviews, decades of scientific research, and abstract mathematics of climate change about the possible end of the world as we know it. We’re told that it’s worse than we could possibly imagine and whatever we fear, we’re “barely scratching the surface of what terrors are possible”. While acknowledging that ongoing global warming will “eventually” have “very severe consequences”, the Climate Feedback blog argues that the concept of Earth becoming uninhabitable within anywhere near the timescales suggested in the article are scientifically dubious and “pure hyperbole”, disregarding the latest foreboding IPCC report.Posted on 10/08/23
- Kotzé, Louis J., and Sam Adelman. "Environmental Law and the Unsustainability of Sustainable Development: A Tale of Disenchantment and of Hope".
Law Critique.
(September 08, 2022).
https://doi.org/... (Contributed by G. Autin).
The sustainable development principle drives environmentally destructive neoliberal economic growth that exploits and degrades the local ecology. Despite well-meaning intentions behind sustainable development, it facilitates exploitative economic development activities that exacerbate systemic inequalities and injustices and the global “market-is-king” model of capitalism. The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) cannot be adopted as a global sustainability objective for all societies. Instead, they must be applied in a way that is community-centric, ecologically-balanced and culturally-sensitive. Like 𝘣𝘶𝘦𝘯 𝘷𝘪𝘷𝘪𝘳, they must offer the potential to critically rethink how societies could re-orientate to radically different locally beneficial socio-ecological sustainabilityPosted on 07/08/23
- Our World in Data team. "Sustainable Development Goal 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure".
Our World in Data.
July 18, 2023.
https://ourworldindata.org/...
Sustainable Development Goal 9 is to “build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation”, according to the United Nations. For SDG 9, the UN has defined 8 targets that specify the goals and 12 indicators that represent the metrics by which the world aims to track whether these targets are achieved. This toolkit provided by Our World in Data presents the global perspective on where the world stands today and how it has changed over time. It quotes the original text of the targets and shows the data on the agreed indicators, to build SDG-targeted infrastructure.Posted on 03/08/23
- Schulev-Steindl, Eva, and Barbara Goby. "Rechtliche Optionen zur Verbesserung des Zugangs zu Gerichten im österreichischen Umweltrecht gemäß der Aarhus-Konvention (Artikel 9 Absatz 3)".
Institut für Rechtswissenschaften Universität für Bodenkultur Wien.
https://www.bmk.gv.at/...
„Der Natur und Umwelt eine Stimme geben!“ – So oder ähnlich könnte man das Anliegen der 1998 unter der Schirmherrschaft der UNECE geschlossenen Aarhus-Konvention umschreiben. Auch Österreich ist diesem internationalen Abkommen beigetreten, das es sich zum Ziel gesetzt hat, die Durchsetzung des Umweltrechts mit Hilfe der Bürgerinnen und Bürger sowie der Umweltorganisationen zu verbessern. Dazu sieht die Konvention drei Säulen vor: das Recht auf Umweltinformation, die Öffentlichkeitsbeteiligung an umweltrelevanten Entscheidungsverfahren und den Zugang zu Gerichten in Umweltangelegenheiten. Österreich hat die Vorgaben der Konvention in den verschiedensten Bereichen des Umweltrechts umgesetzt; zu verweisen ist dabei vor allem auf das Umweltinformationsgesetz sowie die Bürgerbeteiligung.Posted on 03/08/23