- Business travellers rank convenience (27%) and loyalty programmes (21%) as more important than environmental concerns (16%) when booking travel
- Whilst 71% of businesses offer a sustainability policy or guidelines, barely one third (37%) actively enforce it
- Yet, 74% of business travellers believe it is their organisation’s responsibility to enable sustainable business travel, regardless of cost
LONDON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Emburse, the global leader in spend optimisation, today releases the findings of its latest research on attitudes towards sustainability amongst British business travellers. The Censuswide survey of 1,003 employees and 254 employers asked where sustainability fits within the business travel agenda, as trip volumes approach pre-pandemic levels. The data showed that while the environment is front of mind for many companies and their travelling employees, the majority are yet to turn good intentions into concrete actions, and are placing the onus on the other to implement sustainable travel.
According to the report, 38% of businesses reported increased investment in sustainability, with 71% reporting having a formal sustainability policy or guidelines in place. However, only 37% of these businesses actively enforce these policies during bookings and travel expense approvals.
Only one in six employees cited sustainability as their key priority when making travel plans, significantly below both cost and traveller convenience. Whilst environmental concerns remain a low priority during the booking process for business travellers, 71% said their employer should do more to enable sustainable travel. Meanwhile, the majority (76%) of employees also agreed they would take a more sustainable mode of transport if financial incentives or sustainability programmes were available.