Airlines May Have a Tougher Road to Reducing Plastics Than Hotels
Airlines May Have a Tougher Road to Reducing Plastics Than Hotels
Airlines May Have a Tougher Road to Reducing Plastics Than Hotels

In This Article:

Many travel companies are now working to reduce their plastic waste, but is this a taller order for some sectors than others?

Airlines face challenges here that hotels simply don’t, according to Christian de Boer, managing director of Jaya House River Park, a 36-room luxury boutique hotel in Siem Reap, Cambodia. “For hotels, I think we might have a leg up on this one,” said de Boer.

“Airlines have a much more challenging job in sustainability and plastic reduction than hotels,” said Anne De Hauw, founder of design firm In Air Travel Experience, citing by email time constraints between takeoff and landing, onboard space, and weight among other factors.

Chiefly, hotels are not as concerned with the weight restrictions that dictate so much of airline operations. Plastic allows airlines to cater food and beverage while minimizing the plane’s weight, thereby increasing fuel efficiency and reducing carbon emissions. Replacing plastic with heavier glass or china would have a noticeable negative effect.

Even plastics that potentially comprise small portions of the plane itself — including tray tables and overhead bin doors, which are very durable and far from single-use — help lower the overall weight. “In the case of the aircraft, plastic definitely still is a valuable option,” said De Hauw. Among the biggest environmental priorities for Delta Air Lines is reducing fuel consumption through modernizing its fleet, according to chief marketing officer Tim Mapes. “There’s a degree of wrong with single-use. There’s also potentially a degree of right with plastic that’s intended to be recycled and repurposed and reused,” he said.

Regarding the structural part of the plane, plastic is nonexistent, though CFRPs (carbon fiber reinforced polymer composites) are increasingly used, according to Richard Aboulafia, vice president of analysis at research firm Teal Group. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner for example is 50 percent composite by weight.

Airlines also uniquely face ultra-cramped space as well as potentially handling breakable materials in the air, though many airlines already successfully do this for first and business class service.

Despite the challenges, de Boer has high standards for airlines delivering plastic-free flights. “That should become the norm,” he said. These have been piloted on a one-off basis by Etihad Airways and Portuguese charter service Hi Fly — free of single-use plastics, not free of plastics altogether — and Qantas ran a zero-landfill-waste flight.

Tea service at Jaya House
Tea service at Jaya House

Tea service in a hotel room with reusable materials, photo by Jaya House River Park.