Sustainability
We at Luang Prabang View Hotel are proud to be a sustainable accommodation, taking responsibility for our impacts on the environment, our employees, and the local community.
- Complying with the legal requirements of environmental legislation and regulation
- Setting objectives and targets, measuring progress, and reporting our achievements. We aim to reduce our carbon emission and water consumption by 10% by December 2024.
- Consider energy efficiency when purchasing new electrical equipment.
- Preventing pollution and minimizing it by reducing the use of harmful substances by using Natural antibacterial cleaning products
- Using non-renewable resources like energy and water efficiently and making sure that we reduce the waste that we produce including a no single use plastic policy
- Protecting and enhancing all our neighboring ecosystems
- Raising awareness of our environmental commitments with our employees, customers, suppliers, and the local community, encouraging them support our activities
- Working with our suppliers to embed sustainable practices into our supply chain
Human Rights and Labor Practices
- Complying with the legal requirements of employment and human rights legislation and regulation
- Respecting our employees and their culture, traditions, and intellectual property rights
- Treating our employees equally, regardless of their age, disability, nationality, sex, race, religion, sexual orientation, or gender reassignment in all aspects of the business (including but not restricted to recruitment, general employment, training, and promotion).
- Ongoing training and professional development for all our employees
- Training our employees on our sustainability policies so they understand and are actively involved in the achievement of our objectives and targets.
- Allowing our employees to join a Trade Union and to meet up in working hours to discuss employment-related issues. If a trade union is not available, we allow them to form their own association and elect a spokesperson to discuss employment issues
- Employing people from local community wherever possible.
- Maintaining a close relationship with our local community, ensuring that issues of their concern are discussed and resolved
- Purchasing goods and services from local suppliers, wherever possible
- Making regular donations to local environmental or humanitarian charities and encourage our guests to support them too
- Protecting children from all form of abuse and exploitation, ensuring our staff are trained so they know what to do if they suspect a child is at risk, in or near our property
- We have procedures in place to ensure we are monitoring guests and staff feedback and making any necessary changes to our business because of that feedback
- Full compliance with relevant legal requirements
- Creating and maintaining a safe and healthy environment and elimination of conditions that could result in activities with non-negligible probability of adverse effects.
- Continuous training, development, and evaluation of the adequacy of staff in the use of machinery and equipment, use of chemicals and manual handling and continuous awareness of health and safety at work.
The ASEAN MICE-award winning Luang Prabang View presents a model for sustainability that reaches into every area of the hotel’s operation. Though the property saves and makes thousands of dollars through its sustainable practices, it focusses on doing what they feel is the right thing. Luang Prabang View’s staff see sustainability as a way of life combined with common sense, and they integrate it into their daily workload.
Guests can easily notice many of the Luang Prabang
View’s sustainable practices in their rooms and around the hotel. Other
initiatives are less apparent. Below is a list showing the reach of the hotel’s
eco-friendly policies.
- Key cards control electrical
power including hot water tanks.
- Staff unplug all
electrical devices in vacant Green Season rooms to decrease consumption.
- Large windows bring in
more daylight to light up rooms.
- Housekeepers set room
temperatures to 25°C (77°F)
- Housekeepers close
window shades on hot days to lower air-conditioning use.
- The hotel records each
room’s energy consumption.
- Staff only fill Green
Season rooms’ minibars the day before arrivals.
- Fresh milk in
containers have replaced foil creamer packets.
- Sugar containers have
replaced paper sugar packets.
- The hotel provides
cotton bags for shopping so
guests can avoid bringing back purchases in plastic bags.
- The hotel has replaced
plastic water bottles with refillable glass bottles.
- The hotel’s farm uses
coffee pods to germinate seeds and start plants.
- Engineers clean air-conditioners’
condensers and compressors every four months.
- Hotel-grown orchids and
aloe, and not cut flowers, clean and refresh the rooms’ air.
- A card notifies guests
of the option to reuse towels.
- A room’s only plastic
bag is in the toilet room, and it’s biodegradable.
- Double-flush toilets
use between 6 and 9 litres of water.
- The hotel has replaced
plastic straws with paper, and is sourcing biodegradable/compostable
alternatives.
- The hotel has replaced
large black plastic bags with green netting for dry items such as tin cans and
plastic bottles and bags.
- The hotel now employs
reusable glass bottles for in-room drinking water.
- Restaurants use paper
bags and biodegradable/compostable containers for take away.
- The hotel provides
cotton shopping bags so guests can avoid receiving purchases in plastic bags.
- The gardener puts holes
in foam and plastic cups and coffee pods to germinate and start plants.
The hotel has some 16,000 lamps, and is moving to use
100% LED light bulbs, which will annually save more than $5,000 in kw/hrs.
Recycling
Wastewater: The “Grey Pond” System
The hotel has replaced conventional septic tanks
with the grey pond system that uses three ponds to clean waste water for use in
the gardens and grounds. The grey pond system presents less sludge than septic
tanks, which lowers pumping expenses.
- Pond
1: This 20×30-metre pond is 3 metres deep, and uses floating hyacinth
to lessen the odour, and aquatic plants to help filter the sewage.
- Pond 2: Water from Pond
1 naturally flows into the 20×40-metre Pond 2 that is 4 metres deep. The pond
is home to some 1,000 catfish and other fish, which thrive. This shows the
water is getting better, and the hyacinth now overwhelms any odour.
- Pond 3: The 30×40
metre, 5-metre deep Pond 3 is the last stop in the grey pond system. The
gardeners use this water in the gardens and grounds.
Locals breed and raise a variety of animals at the
hotel’s on-site farm, which is expanding to other pastures in the area. Some
are sold, while others are used in the kitchen and can even reach the dining
rooms. Meet Luang Prabang View’s livestock and fowl.
- The
farm and hotel sell pigs.
- The
ranch raises and breeds fowl populations including chickens, ducks, and turkeys.
- The
kitchen uses chicken and duck eggs, as well as the chickens for Lao food and
soups.
- Some
eggs hatch, with grown chickens being sold.
- The
small spread breeds and raises wild fowl for
eggs required on the organic Lao and Chinese menus.
- Three
types of chickens are bred and raised: Black Bone Indonesian, Japanese, and
Vietnamese.
What started as an on-site herb and vegetable
garden to help feed the staff canteen has expanded into a small farm with
support from the hotel. The local farmer operating this Edible Garden, now
sells thousands of dollars in organic herbs and vegetables to Luang Prabang
View that land on your plate. The Edible Garden also grows fruit and flowers,
and only uses regenerative or sustainable plants.
Enjoy a salad or dish with vegetables grown just
metres away. Alongside staples like lettuce, tomatoes and cherry tomatoes,
spinach, and cabbage and celery, you’ll find plates with home-grown mustard greens,
winged beans, and Chinese kale.
The chefs tweak meals with herbs, spices and mints
grown at the hotel. Hints of tarragon, basil, thyme, coriander, and sage spring
dishes to life. You can also taste the garden’s mint, peppermint, and dill,
along with the ever-present parsley.
Fruit trees and plants on the property can also
make it to your plate. Freshly picked papaya, bananas, and pandanus are
presented on dessert and room platters. Eggplant and luffa often find a place
on your dish, and lemons are there for the picking. The hotel even packages
appetizers and desserts with banana leaves.
Luang Prabang View’s nine, 1.5×3-metre compost
heaps annually produce a ton of natural fertilizer to rejuvenate the soil. This
saves the hotel hundreds of dollars in soil purchases a year. The process is
quick and simple. Staff mix waste, leaves, branches, cut grass, shrub
trimmings, fruit peelings, and coffee grounds, water it down, add paper and
card board, and remove plastic and big sticks. After 45 days to three months,
they sieve the compost and mix with garden soil as a nutrient. Rice husks are
then added for body. Money saved goes to the gardening and farm team to
purchase more seeds and feed.
The Animal Farm’s menu presents dishes from
restaurant waste…and livestock love it, especially pigs. Gardeners boil fruit
peelings, wet food waste, and coffee grounds along with salt to come up with
food to nutritiously feed the farm animals while saving money.
Luang Prabang View replaces chemicals with Effective
Microorganisms (EM), produced from hotel waste, for use as a natural,
eco-friendly soil fertilizer, kitchen and bath cleaner, insecticide, and drain
cleaner. It also saves the hotel thousands of dollars in bio-cleaning
purchases. Ingredients come from fresh fruit peelings, vegetables, and termite
nests mixed with molasses, and takes 45 days to mature.
Luang Prabang View hunts for garbage to recycle,
and makes hundreds of dollars a year doing it. Below is a sample list of items
recycled for cash every year.
- Plastic Bottles: 648 kg
- Beverage Cans: 89 kg
- Large Plastic Containers:
29 kg
- Boxes: 646 kg
- Old Steel: 168 kg
- Tissue and paper towel
rolls: 337 kg
- Tetrapak Juice Bottles:
170 kg
- Paper: 288 kg
- Housekeeping Garbage:
462 kg