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Sustainability is not the new normal…

October 13, 2025/in event:decision, Impact

Sustainability is not the new normal – despite many wishing it so.

It’s easy to believe that sustainability has become the default for present-day events. After all, every RFP mentions “green initiatives,” and many planners can proudly point to sustainably labelled menus or the removal of overt single-use plastics. Yet, as both event:decision data and the Amex GBT 2026 Global Meetings & Events Forecast shows, sustainability is not quite the new normal — not yet.

The data tells a more nuanced story: one of strong intent, rising expectations, but slow implementation and limited evidence.

The positive shift: sustainability as an expectation

There’s no doubt that the mindset has changed. The Amex GBT 2026 Annual Meetings Forecast notes that “sustainability is no longer optional,” especially as younger generations expect events to reflect environmental and social responsibility as standard practice. Nearly one in four meeting professionals say attendees now demand visible sustainability actions — from reducing plastics to sourcing local and plant-based food and drink. That means that 3 in 4 do not.

For 38% of organisations, sustainability is already embedded in their event policies. That’s a major step forward — it signals that sustainability is moving from one-off gestures towards some systemic integration.

Eloísa Urrutia, Head of Sustainability at Amex GBT Meetings & Events, says: “Sustainability is a business and social imperative, but it is also personal. It’s emotive, drives loyalty, and inspires.”

When done well, sustainability initiatives not only reduce environmental impact but can massively increase social value associated with an event; and actually enhance engagement and brand value.

You can see this in action. There’s a 3pt increase in responsible and sustainable event delivery over the last 12-months’ data from event:decision’s Impact: Responsible Performance Review tool (May ’24 – May ’25). But of all global events, the sample is small.

The reality check:

Despite planner optimism, data shows that sustainability still competes for attention against more traditional pressures. Of course it does. According to the AmexGBT report:
– Only 25% of event professionals currently track emissions. That means 3 in 4 do not.
– Just 28% plan to prioritise improvements to sustainability metrics in 2026. That means 2 in 3 do not.
– And while 38% have sustainability written into policy, 28% still classify it as a “pending initiative,” trailing behind cost reduction and attendee engagement in priority.

This measurement gap is critical. Without reliable data, it’s impossible to quantify progress, justify budget spend, or demonstrate ROI — all of which are essential for making the business case for sustainability.

In ‘The Value of Values”, Daniel Aronson quotes a global CFO as saying “only two department come into my office and ask for money with no numbers – HR and sustainability”.

In other words, we’re all still stuck at the stage of good intentions without consistent proof.

What’s Working?

The AmexGBT report does show some encouraging movement toward practical implementation. Event professionals are making tangible changes, such as:

– 38% have introduced sustainable meetings and event policies.
– 34% are minimising disposables and prioritising sustainable materials.
– 33% are offering local, seasonal, and plant-based catering.
– 31% prioritise sustainable venues.
– 30% implement waste avoidance practices, like food donation programs.

This means that roughly two-thirds of us do not. Therein is an opportunity for venues and agencies looking for commercial advantage.

These are meaningful shifts — they demonstrate that sustainability is not purely a buzzword. Our industry is starting to innovate, adapt and learn. The event sector is highly fragmented but the tools available to do this are not. They will cope with events of any size, scope, format and geography. They are consistent, practical and cost-effective.

Bridging the gap: from goodwill to normal practice

If our industry is to make sustainability truly “the new normal,” three things must happen:

1. Measurement must mature. Social value tracking & carbon reporting, need to become as common as budgeting and attendance reporting. Why would people want this? Because events deliver value, and this value can be tracked.
2. Sustainability must drive creativity, not limit it. As budgets tighten, and let’s face it, they are, sustainability should be inspiring smarter, more meaningful experiences rather than adding constraints.
3. Legacy should become a benchmark. The question shouldn’t be “was the event sustainable?” but “what lasting positive value did my event leave?”. Every organisation can choose whether to purely deliver cash to its shareholders or to do so with purpose.

Legacy is often linked to the ‘People’ part of People, Planet, Profit, or the ‘S’ in ESG. Did you know you can benchmark the ‘S’ in your event with event:decision’s Impact Review tool?

What next?

The Amex GBT 2026 Forecast paints a hopeful picture. Sustainability is becoming more expected – but it hasn’t yet become standard. Far from it. Sustainability is still an aspiration rather than an assumption.

The event sector started strong but momentum is in danger of stalling: sustainability is embedded in policy, sometimes visible in practice and now increasingly recognised as a driver of attendee engagement. But until it’s measured, budgeted for, and benchmarked, it won’t quite be the “new normal.”

The events industry needs to mature – to deliver good strategic advice allied with sound tactics to our stakeholders – advice and tactics based, not on menus and plastic bottles, but on real numbers.

https://eventdecision.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Untitled-1024-x-768-px-1.jpg 768 1024 Matt Grey https://eventdecision.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/mainlogo-ed.png Matt Grey2025-10-13 10:35:412025-10-24 06:25:01Sustainability is not the new normal…

Business Travel Growth Forecast

October 7, 2025/in event:decision, Impact, Track

Business Travel Growth Forecast: what impact for events?

Almost half of corporates to spend more on business travel in FY26, is the forecast by FCM Travel. Excellent news if you’re in the business of travel, and for that matter, probably if you’re in the business of meetings and events.

It indicates more opportunities for face-to-face engagement, collaboration, and the overall growth of the events sector. However, it also raises questions about sustainability, as increased travel is traditionally associated (read, absolutely associated) with higher carbon emissions, hence event carbon footprints.

How does this square with oft-quoted event planning agencies promising reduced environmental impacts?

This is exactly where event:decision Impact: Responsible Event Reviews are crucial. Impact Reviews help ensure that even as volumes of events and travel increase, sustainability is embedded and demonstrable.

How you show your events are responsible:

  1. Measure Beyond Carbon

Impact Reviews assess events across environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors, not just carbon emissions. This includes venue sustainability, catering choices, accessibility, certifications, waste reduction, supply chain responsibility and event legacy. Balancing travel impacts with positive social and governance measures.

  1. Benchmarking & Improvement

Each event is benchmarked against industry performance and previous events. You can demonstrate year-on-year improvement, even if travel volumes rise, by showing better destination & venue sourcing, reduced waste, increased local supply and stronger community benefits.

You can benchmark by region, by industry sector and/or by event-type also.

  1. Offsetting & Mitigation

event:decision tools highlight opportunities for carbon reduction and offsetting, such as virtual attendance options, low-carbon menu choices, and more sustainable transport alternatives. In fact, only with event:decision’s Track Carbon service do you receive a curated low-carbon door-to-door travel plan, specifically for your event.

 This ensures travel impact is acknowledged but managed in line with best practice.

  1. Transparency & Reporting

An Impact: Responsible Event Review provides a clear, third-party validated framework that you can use in sustainability reporting. This helps counterbalance any criticism that “more travel = less sustainable,” by showing that events are planned responsibly, transparently, and within ESG frameworks.

The big picture

Even as corporate travel spend rises, responsible event design can ensure that events are still responsible & sustainable. The key is to show stakeholders — through Impact: Responsible Event Reviews — that the event is measured, benchmarked, and actively improved, time after time.

https://eventdecision.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/ED-Web-Graphics-Blog-Post-images.png 768 1024 Laura Robinson https://eventdecision.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/mainlogo-ed.png Laura Robinson2025-10-07 09:20:072025-10-07 09:16:36Business Travel Growth Forecast

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