Starwood Hotels & Resorts has announced that,
beginning July 2014, it will no longer procure shark fin in any of
its nearly 1,200 hotels or 1,300 restaurants around the world.
The company said it is committed to
completely eliminating the consumption of shark fin, without
exception, in all restaurants and food and beverage services
across its global portfolio by year-end.
Frits van Paasschen, President and Chief
Executive Officer of Starwood, said, “At Starwood, we believe
economic growth and the well-being of society are inextricably
tied to the health of the environment, including the health of the
world’s oceans and its inhabitants. Our worldwide ban on shark fin
represents an important, environmentally responsible step to aid
in the collective goal of marine preservation. As a company with a
collection of hotels that span the globe, Starwood has a unique
opportunity to influence travelers and guests worldwide, and to
underline the importance of good stewardship of our planet.”
The world’s shark population is in severe crisis, with an
estimated 100 million sharks lost each year to illegal hunting and
poaching, primarily for use in traditional luxury dishes throughout Asia, often at weddings. Some shark species have
suffered population declines of as much as 90 to 99% in
recent decades.
Since first removing shark fin from its
public menus in 2012, Starwood has worked diligently with hotel
owners and partners around the world to institute an outright ban
on the dish, and has already reduced overall purchases of shark
fin within the company’s portfolio by 79% in the past two years.
In addition to prohibiting the procurement and consumption
of shark fin, Starwood has also banned whale and sea turtle,
globally, from all of its menus. The exclusion of threatened seafood species from the company’s food and beverage venues is an
important component of Starwood’s Sustainable Food & Beverage
Policy. Initially published in 2012, the “Eat Local, Think Global”
program is a collection of principles that guides sustainable food
and beverage sourcing, production, consumption and disposal within
and across Starwood properties worldwide.
“This is tremendously good news and a beacon of corporate
leadership in ocean health,” said Peter Seligmann, CEO, Chairman
and co-founder of Conservation International, a global partner of
Starwood's since 2009. “As apex predators, sharks serve a critical
role in maintaining healthy ocean ecosystems, which directly
support our fisheries, economies, culture and health. Their value
to human well-being is so much greater than the misguided worth of
their severed fins. Starwood's company-wide ban on shark fin in
each and every one of their properties sends a powerful signal
that businesses can be positive change agents in the effort to
ensure the responsible use of our planet's natural capital.”
Starwood,
Shark Fin
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