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Bottled up

How the hospitality and tourism industry can help solve a global issue
WHOLE WORLD Water bottle, designed by Yves Behar

WHOLE WORLD Water begins with the premise that positive change and investment requires a model that focuses on sustainable growth. By leading with a profit incentive, WHOLE WORLD Water encourages long-term commitments for grand scale solutions. Building the bottom line is a great incentive for any business to start to change the world.

It's simple:

  1. Hotels, resorts and restaurants become members of the WHOLE WORLD Water Campaign for a nominal membership fee.
  2. They filter their own water, and bottle and sell it in the WHOLE WORLD Water reusable glass bottles.
  3. They contribute 10 percent of the profits to the WHOLE WORLD Water Fund.

And they see their bottom line increase as much as 25 percent.

This simplicity has attracted leaders in the industry who do not believe that sacrificing their profits goes part and parcel with reducing their impact on the planet and the people who live on it. Members – Soneva Resorts, Yoo Hotels, Banyan Tree, JetWing Hotels & Resorts, Oberoi Hotels and Resorts, Tao Restaurant Group, Virgin Limited Edition, and more – understand that investing in social issues does not have to come at the expense of environmental and economic progress. In fact, they go hand in hand.

But the benefits go beyond the bottom line. Members will see a reduction in food miles by curbing the shipments of commercially bottled water, alongside a reduction in plastic waste. They will serve a high quality product for guests and employees by tapping and filtering their own water. And they will become part of a non-competitive global platform reaching new travelers around the world whose ideals align with their commitment.

This initiative has a truly global footprint. Funds raised will come from every continent and have the opportunity to be invested back into the communities in which our members do business every day. With scale, everyone will have the potential to engage and benefit from WHOLE WORLD Water.

Our hope is that participation in WHOLE WORLD Water will inspire our members to look at other ways they can affect positive change and build their business – sourcing their goods and products locally, managing their waste efficiently, and aggressively supporting their communities. WHOLE WORLD Water exemplifies a new way to do business designed to unite an industry, create scalable impact, and balance environmental, social and economic progress. Collectively we can raise millions, even billions to help eradicate this issue and provide safe and clean drinking water for all.

Jenifer Willig is a co-founder of WHOLE WORLD Water. Partnering with iconic brands including Nike, Apple, Dell, Microsoft, and Starbucks Jenifer most recently led (RED), the organization founded by Bono and Bobby Shriver to fight AIDS in Africa. Through her leadership (RED) raised $185 million and became a global brand with a social following of over 2.5 million active people who advocate on behalf of (RED). Jenifer is the founder of motive, a social innovation consultancy.

Comments

The Refinishing Touch's picture

It’s clear that the hospitality and travel industries have the potential to make significant impacts on sustainability and green initiatives in large part to size, influence, and resources. As a company dedicated to improving sustainability and cost-saving measures in hotels through solutions such as furniture asset management, it’s great to read about what Karena and Jenifer have accomplished through WHOLE WORLD Water. The project should serve as an example for hotels and large organizations around the world that it is possible to reduce waste, help others, and build on the bottom line at the same time. As the article points out, sustainable growth requires long-term commitments; however those long-term commitments can also produce wide-spread business benefits. Once hotels begin to recognize that sustainability is no longer just a fad, the sooner they can start affecting positive change and company ROI.

Heather's picture

Interesting idea, and could be helpful in the short term. Doesn't seem like a long term solution to me, though. Reminds me of the "Teach a man to fish" saying. With this model, there is still a cycle of dependence for basic needs.

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