Animal Cruelty Rankings Revealed: Which Travel Companies Are Fueling or Fighting It?
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Airbnb, Tripadvisor, Expedia, and other world-leading travel companies have been ranked for their commitment to animal welfare, in our new report – the first of its kind.
The report, Tracking The Travel Industry, exposes the companies that promote animal cruelty through the tours and excursions they sell, as well as those that are winning for wildlife, such as Airbnb, which scored the highest.
Elephant rides, tiger cub selfies, dolphin shows, and other wild animal circus-style performances are all big business for travel companies, allowing them to rake in profits from tourists. However, the wild animals exploited for these activities don’t gain anything.
They’re subjected to a life of misery and suffering, snatched from the wild or often bred in captivity in unacceptable conditions, and separated from their mothers too soon.
COVID-19 is an opportunity for the industry.
Tourism has ground to a complete standstill as the world grapples with the current COVID-19 pandemic. We’re encouraging the travel industry to seize this opportunity and come back stronger, more resilient, and ethical by protecting wild animals instead of harming them.
Global tourist polls have also shown there’s a great customer appetite for this. 85% of respondents interviewed believe travel companies should avoid activities that involve wild animals suffering.
The research, undertaken by the University of Surrey in the UK and commissioned by World Animal Protection, has independently analyzed the public commitments travel companies have and haven’t made and ranked them in order.
Companies assessed include Airbnb, AttractionTickets.com, Booking.com, DER Touristik, Expedia, Flight Centre, GetYourGuide, Klook, Musement, The Travel Corporation, Tripadvisor, TUI.co.uk, Trip.com, and Viator.
The scores
Airbnb is the highest-ranked company, scoring full points when it comes to prohibiting performances, fights, and races for all wild animals.
The company also scored highly for defining a clear scope for its policy and explicitly making it applicable to all suppliers, products, and brands.
Airbnb worked closely with World Animal Protection’s US office on its animal welfare policy to ensure it was developed to the highest standards. The Travel Corporation, Tripadvisor, Booking.com, and Viator, also scored highly.
Most companies have a long way to go.
Major companies such as Expedia and Flight Centre need to make significant improvements, ranking as ‘poor’ and ‘very poor’, respectively.
GetYourGuide, Klook, and Musement are “failing” and at the bottom of the ranking and will be left behind by more progressive companies if they don’t increase their commitment to welfare.
Companies were scored across four key areas:
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Commitment: Availability and quality of published animal welfare policies and how applicable they are to all their brands.
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Targets and performance: Availability and scope of published time-bound targets and reports on progress towards meeting animal welfare commitments.
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Changing industry supply: Availability and quality of engagement with suppliers and the overall industry to implement wildlife-friendly changes.
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Changing consumer demand: Availability and quality of educational animal welfare content and tools to empower consumers to make wildlife-friendly travel choices.
Nick Stewart, global head of campaign – wildlife, says:
“People are beginning to rethink travel and the ‘new normal’ as we live through the pandemic. In the case of wildlife tourism, we know that people still want to see wild animals – but not at the cost of cruelty.
Global companies such as Airbnb are joining us in the fight against animal cruelty and trailblazing the way. Right now, the travel industry has a unique chance to change the world for good and end cruel wildlife attractions.
Tourists are becoming increasingly concerned about animal cruelty, and we will continue to be a voice for wildlife, piling the pressure on travel companies to make real and lasting change.”
We must end wild animal exploitation. Forever. We are calling on everyone, from tourists to tour operators, to take responsibility and end the exploitation of wild animals forever.
Less demand for cruel tourist attractions means fewer wild animals suffer and can stay in the wild where they belong.
Petition update:
We called on G20 global leaders to enforce a global wildlife trade ban to eliminate the threats of future pandemics – for people, planet, and animals. Over 1 million people lent their signatures in support of our open letter to make sure global leaders listen.
We are calling on everyone – from tourists to tour operators – to take responsibility and put an end to the exploitation of wild animals forever.