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Xanterra’s Fourth Sustainability Report Shows Strong Progress

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DENVER—Xanterra Parks & Resorts is making significant progress toward reaching environmental goals outlined in its 2015 Environmental Vision, a set of aggressive environmental performance goals. The operator of lodging and concessions in national parks and resorts around the country spelled out its progress using environmental performance metrics, called “Ecometrix.” The company’s achievements and measurable progress toward its environmental goals are detailed in the company’s fourth Environmental Sustainability Report.

In the report, Xanterra’s president and CEO, Andrew Todd, wrote about the devastation brought about by recent environmental disasters, such as the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Todd cited Xanterra’s attempts “to find ways to reduce our fossil fuel consumption and associated carbon footprint, doing our part to indirectly prevent future environmental catastrophes.”

Xanterra’s mission is simple, he added. Not only has it already begun programs that leave a “softer footprint,” but it also has a 2015 Environmental Vision with goals that “articulate how this vision relates to energy, carbon emissions, waste, sustainable design, sustainable foods, transportation and water.”

The Sustainability Report summarizes Xanterra’s progress in reaching these goals based on measurements taken over a 10-year period from 2000 to 2009.

Numbers Tell Success Story

Absolute greenhouse gas emissions, for example, are down 20.9 percent since 2000, and Xanterra’s goal is a 30 percent decrease by 2015. The company has already doubled its goal to increase usage of renewable energy to provide 7 percent of total electricity consumed. As of 2009, renewable energy provided 14.1 percent of companywide electricity usage. And Xanterra is closing in on its 2015 goal to divert 50 percent of solid waste from landfills. In 2009, its companywide diversion rate had reached 47 percent, and several operations achieved diversion rates in excess of 70 percent.

Xanterra’s commitment to environmentally sustainable operations has led to many permanent changes to the way it operates or enhances existing facilities. Here are 10 examples of environmental initiatives undertaken at Xanterra operations during the last few years. Follow the links for complete information about these initiatives.

1. Developed a retail store “with a conscience.” Called For Future Generations: Yellowstone Gifts, the store not only sells environmentally sensitive products, but also educates shoppers about making sustainable consumer choices using a one-of-a-kind product environmental scorecard system.
2. Retrofitted the inefficient and polluting steam-powered engines of the Grand Canyon Railway to run on clean-burning, 100-percent-recycled vegetable oil. Also, collecting rainwater on site is saving 11,000 gallons of potable water per trip.
3. Banned the sale of plastic water bottles at Zion Lodge in Zion National Park. Hydration stations have been installed so guests can use their own refillable bottles. Plastic water bottles were banned from national park operations in Zion as well. The initiative immediately took 30,000 plastic bottles out of the park’s waste stream.
4. Installed a 1.3 MW solar photovoltaic system, the largest in the tourism industry, at the Furnace Creek Resort in California’s Death Valley National Park, generating enough electricity to supply the resort with 100 percent of its power during the day.  5. Started reusing waste vegetable oil at operations in Yellowstone National Park; it is now plumbed directly to boilers to heat buildings.
6. Started replacing all the old diesel-powered buses at the South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park with new clean-burning, compressed natural gas (CNG)-powered buses. There are now 11 CNG-powered buses in the fleet.
7. Installed a wind turbine at Maumee Bay State Park Lodge in northwest Ohio to generate electricity.
8. Replaced all in-room amenities that were formerly in small plastic bottles with environmentally preferable, fully biodegradable cornstarch-based containers.
9. Swapped out old, more toxic cleaning products for the more sustainable Green Seal-certified cleaning products at all Xanterra properties.
10. Donated more than $1.7 million to the National Park Foundation over the past eight years.
 
All these efforts have garnered the company a multitude of awards. For a complete list of Xanterra’s sustainable efforts, and the full sustainability report, go online to www.xanterra.com and click on Environment.

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