Auckland’s Motuihe Island Receives Sustainable Boost
Auckland’s Motuihe Island Receives Sustainable
Boost from Accor New Zealand
3,200 trees planted nationally to restore
local habitats and celebrate the launch of PLANET 21, the
Accor sustainable development program
Accor New Zealand today announced that
its hotels and offices planted over 3,200 trees across the
country in April and over 35,000 in Asia Pacific to mark the
start of PLANET 21, the hotel group’s new sustainable
development program. The launch campaign engaged employees
and guests to reaffirm Accor’s longstanding commitment to
sustainability, which has seen well over two million trees
planted worldwide since 2008.
To mark the launch of
PLANET 21 in New Zealand, more than 80 staff from Accor’s
Auckland Regional Office, Mercure Auckland, Mercure Auckland
Windsor, Novotel and Ibis Ellerslie, Novotel Auckland
Airport and Formule 1 Auckland Airport hotels gathered to
plant over 100 native trees and shrubs to help restore the
natural habitat on Motuihe Island.
The hotel team
partnered with The Department of Conservation, who manage
the plant and bird life habitat of the island located just
30 minutes offshore from Auckland’s CBD, to ensure that
suitable sites were chosen for the tree
planting.
This was the third year that Accor’s
Auckland hotels have planted trees on Motuihe Island and it
was very rewarding for the group to see trees from previous
years still growing strong and the restoration of the
island’s native biodiversity.
Accor unveiled
PLANET 21 globally on 12 April, making 21 commitments
covering all of the group’s environmental, social and
community investment actions, and setting the same number of
quantifiable goals for the year 2015, including: 100% of
hotels banning endangered seafood species from hotel menus;
hotel employees trained in disease prevention; a 15%
reduction in water consumption; and 10% decrease in energy
use at Accor’s owned and leased hotels
worldwide.
“PLANET 21 represents the next step in
Accor’s two decade-long journey toward sustainability”
said Michael Issenberg, Chairman and Chief Operating
Officer, Accor Asia-Pacific. “With PLANET
21, Accor is placing sustainability at the core of our
global business strategy. We believe that PLANET 21 will
provide a fantastic driver of competitiveness for our
brands, attractiveness for our customers and partners and
loyalty for our employees."
Accor hotels around the
world celebrated the launch of PLANET 21 with activities to
raise awareness about environmental and social issues among
guests and employees. In Asia-Pacific, Accor’s 500 hotels
and offices focused on planting trees to bring attention to
the Group’s innovative Plant for the Planet reforestation
program that has, since 2008, financed the planting of well
over two million trees globally.
Accor has
made a commitment to plant three million trees by the end of
2012 as part of the United Nations Environment Program’s
Plant for the Planet Billion Tree campaign. The program
engages guests, inviting them to reuse their towels to
reduce energy and water consumption: every time a towel is
re-used by a customer, participating hotels pay half of the
laundry savings to support one of several plantations around
the world.
In total, Accor Asia-Pacific teams
planted over 35,000 trees in 13 countries across the region
during April. Hotel managers were encouraged to think
creatively to engage their employees and guests, resulting
in a number of unique, educational and impactful activities.
“PLANET 21 is as much about inviting our
employees and guests to join us on our sustainability
journey as it is about installing eco-friendly technologies
in our hotels,” said Evan Lewis, Vice President,
Communications, Accor Asia-Pacific. “The launch of the
program was an opportunity to galvanise our teams and engage
our guests around the issue of reforestation, which has long
been a priority for the group. The 35,000 trees planted in
the region bring attention to our unique Plant for the
Planet initiative, which is a cornerstone of the PLANET 21
program. Accor has already planted over two million trees
since 2008 and we aim to grow this number going
forward.”
ENDS