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Regenerative Hospitality is Here to Stay | By Alessandro Inversini

23 April 2025
The Rise of Regenerative Hospitality - Welcome to the Future
The Rise of Regenerative Hospitality - Welcome to the Future (source: Depositphotos)

Why a New Responsibility Approach is Needed

The current system is failing us. Today’s sustainability practices are not enough to meet the scale of our planetary and social crises. Since the Industrial Revolution, our relationship with nature has shifted dramatically - from interdependence and interconnectedness to extraction. Human activity has pushed the planet beyond safe operating limits. As Rockström and colleagues revealed in their 2024 study, six of nine planetary boundaries have now been breached, threatening the delicate balance that sustains life.

At the same time, communities around the world face rising inequalities, loss of services, cultural erosion and economic displacement. Climate change is not the only pressure; we are in the midst of a broader "metacrisis" that calls for a radical rethinking of our systems.

Hospitality, too, must face its limits. Despite decades of sustainability campaigns, most efforts in the industry remain centered around reducing and or mitigating negative business impacts with the goal of offsetting emissions or eliminating plastics (Legrand et al., 2023). Often times, these initiatives actually fall on the shoulders of guests: we all have been staying in an hotel that is asking us whether or not we would like to reuse our shower towels...this is a trivial yet clear example in our beautiful industry. All these actions are important, but insufficient; often times, they tend to be isolated initiatives that don't alter the core business model of the organization, and rarely produce systemic change.

If we truly want to shift course, we need to go beyond harm reduction and embrace a regenerative approach: one that doesn’t just sustain, but actively heals and contributes to the ecosystems and communities we depend on.

From Net-Zero to Net-Positive

Sustainability can no longer be the end goal, it must become the starting point. Regenerative hospitality begins with a mindset rooted in authenticity and mutual flourishing. Instead of simply compensating for or reducing damage, we need to redesign our systems to create net-positive outcomes: operations that leave the local community and the nature – what we can call the place ecosystem, better than we found them (Inversini, 2024).

This new approach, support a radical shifts in hospitality strategy and operations: from a model of extraction to one of contribution. Hotels that focus solely on mitigating their negative impacts often uphold the status quo. In contrast, those that embrace net-positive principles actively contribute to the regeneration of place, creating healthier systems and generating a new balance - one where resilience and vitality can thrive across interconnected living systems (Figure 1).

What's powerful, and specific to hospitality, is that this doesn’t only affect the place. It transforms people on all level. When a hotel is deeply embedded in its natural and social ecosystems, it reshapes the guest experience too. Travelers, staff and local communities all benefit from a space grounded in care, reciprocity and purpose.

Figure 1: Regenerative Hospitality is Here to Stay
Figure 1: Regenerative Hospitality is Here to Stay
Adapted from https://bowieyskung.medium.com/

The Case for Regenerative Hospitality

Regenerative hospitality is not "sustainability on steroids" (Inversini, 2024). It is a shift in worldview and business orientation. It's about becoming an active participant in healing systems, not a passive player in minimizing harm.

Regenerative properties are defined by several characteristics:

This is not about checking boxes. It’s about building an organization that is alive, interconnected with the all living systems of the place.

Not Just a Fad, but a True Business Orientation

Our research with regenerative pioneers (see: http://regenerativehospitality.org) reveals clear common ground among the trailblazers:

It’s tempting to dismiss regeneration as the next buzzword. But that would be a mistake. When approached the right way this is not about marketing claims or feel-good branding. It is a response to systemic breakdown and an invitation to redesign how we work and how we host.

In a world of overshoot and breakdown, regenerative hospitality offers a way forward. It is not perfect. It is not easy. But it is necessary. It puts relationships to self, others, and the planet at the heart of the business.

In Closing

Regenerative hospitality is here to stay. It's not a trend, it's a transformation, it’s the start of a movement. And it calls on all of us, not just to rethink sustainability, but to reimagine our responsibility to the living systems we are part of.

Now is the time. The industry must move beyond minimization and mitigation, and start investing in regeneration: of ecosystems, of communities, of experiences - and of ourselves.

Join us on May 20–21 at the EHL Open Innovation Summit (https://innovationhub.ehl.edu/open-innovation-summit), where we’ll bring this conversation to life in the Regenerative Economies track. Together, we’ll explore bold ideas, learn from trailblazers and work on collaborative solutions to rethink the future of hospitality and travel, one that gives more than it takes.

References & further readings
Inversini, A. (2024). Regenerative Hospitality: what it is, what it is not, what it might be. Retrieved from: https://www.hotelyearbook.com/article/122000314/regenerative-hospitality-what-it-is-what-it-is-not-what-it-might-be.html
Legrand,W., Chen,J.S., Laeis,G., (2023). Sustainability in the Hospitality Industry: Principles of Sustainable Operations, 4th ed. Abington, Oxon: Routledge.
Rockström, J., Donges, J. F., Fetzer, I., Martin, M. A., Wang-Erlandsson, L., & Richardson, K. (2024). Planetary Boundaries guide humanity’s future on Earth. Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, 5(11), 773-788.

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