Radisson Hotel Group has moved its Verified Net Zero Hotels programme from pilot to full global roll-out, announcing an ambitious roadmap to certify 100 properties worldwide by 2030. The expansion was unveiled at the International Hospitality Investment Forum (IHIF) in Berlin this week, marking a significant escalation in the group’s sustainability strategy.
The programme was originally introduced as a proof of concept to demonstrate that net zero status can be achieved not only in newly built properties but also in existing hotel buildings. That distinction matters: the hospitality industry’s decarbonisation challenge lies largely in its existing stock, and Radisson’s model is explicitly designed as a retrofit pathway.
From two hotels to 100
The programme moves from a pilot phase launched in 2025 to a structured multi-year rollout aimed at delivering 100 verified net zero hotels by 2030. Currently, two properties carry the certification: one in Manchester and one in Oslo.
The phased 2026 roll-out begins in Norway, followed by Denmark, Sweden, the United Kingdom and South Africa, which will host the first VNZ hotel on the African continent. Further expansion across Germany, Austria and Spain’s Canary Islands is planned over the five-year roadmap.
The geographic spread is deliberate. By moving into South Africa, Radisson signals that the VNZ framework is not confined to Northern European markets with mature green infrastructure, but is built to function across diverse operating environments.
What the framework requires
The VNZ programme addresses all three emissions scopes, is aligned with the Science Based Targets Initiative, and follows a dedicated Net Zero Methodology for Hotels. It focuses on eliminating Scope 1 and 2 emissions through electrification, renewable energy sourcing and sustainable heating and cooling systems.
Operational Scope 3 emissions are targeted through reductions in food and beverage operations, waste management, laundry, amenities and business travel. Independent verification is conducted by TÜV Rheinland, providing the external audit trail that regulators and institutional investors increasingly expect.
“TÜV Rheinland supports Radisson Hotel Group’s Verified Net Zero initiative by providing independent verification of their decarbonisation measures,” said Dr Kai Höhmann, Senior Vice President, Customised Solutions at TÜV Rheinland. “Ensuring transparency and credibility in sustainability efforts is crucial, and we are committed to upholding these standards through rigorous evaluation.”
The commercial case
Senior leaders will note that Radisson’s announcement is framed around performance data, not aspiration alone. Year-to-date results from the Manchester and Oslo properties show that each hotel registers guest awareness scores above 70%, with around 20% of guests indicating they booked because of the property’s net zero status.
That booking conversion figure carries weight. It suggests sustainability certification is beginning to function as a genuine demand driver rather than simply a reputational credential.
Inge Huijbrechts, Chief Sustainability and Security Officer at Radisson Hotel Group, noted that the results provide hotel owners with “a practical pathway to future-proof their properties and move toward net zero.” The implication for asset owners is clear: decarbonisation and commercial performance are not mutually exclusive.
A new visual identity
At IHIF, the group introduced an official Verified Net Zero icon, set to appear across hotel lobbies, guest communications and digital platforms, including QR-enabled storytelling that explains the sustainability practices at each property.
A 3D-printed version of the icon incorporates organic waste materials from hotel operations, reinforcing the principle that sustainability must be operational, visible and measurable. The design choice is functional as well as symbolic: it creates a recognisable standard that guests, bookers and travel buyers can identify across markets.
Why this matters for the industry
The VNZ programme’s expansion arrives as sustainability reporting requirements tighten across key hospitality markets. The EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and growing pressure from institutional investors are raising the bar for verifiable, scope-level emissions data. Frameworks built on independent audit, like Radisson’s, are increasingly aligned with where regulatory expectation is heading.
As interest grows among regulators, investors and guests regarding sustainability in hospitality, Radisson is positioning its VNZ roll-out as an externally audited model for operational transparency and scalability.
For hotel owners, the programme offers something more tangible than a badge: a structured operating model with documented commercial results. With 98 properties still to be certified over the next four years, the pace of execution will be the real test of whether the ambition holds.


