Today · Apr 6, 2026
Sustainability Just Became Your Lender's Problem. Which Makes It Yours.

Sustainability Just Became Your Lender's Problem. Which Makes It Yours.

When insurers, investors, and lenders start treating climate resilience like a balance sheet metric, "green" stops being a marketing decision and becomes an underwriting one. Most hotel owners aren't ready for that conversation.

I sat in a capital planning meeting about six years ago with an owner who had three hotels in a coastal market. Good hotels. Well-run. His insurance renewal came in 38% higher than the prior year. No claims. No disasters. Just the zip code. He looked at his broker and said, "What am I supposed to do, move the building?" Nobody laughed because nobody had an answer.

That guy was early to a problem that's now hitting everyone. The headline from CoStar says sustainability and climate resilience are now "core metrics" for the people on the outside looking in at your asset. Let me translate that into English: the people who write your insurance policies, approve your loans, and decide whether to buy your hotel are now grading you on how well your building handles what's coming. Not how well you recycle towels. How well your physical plant, your utility infrastructure, and your operating model hold up when energy costs spike 83% (which they did in the UK between 2019 and 2023), when insurance premiums jump 20-50% after a climate event in your region, and when your lender starts asking about your "Green Asset Ratio" because new regulations say they have to.

Here's what nobody's telling you about the money side of this. A recent AHLA survey... March 2026, so this is current... found that 50% of hotel owners cited utility and energy costs as a significant financial pressure, and 43% flagged insurance premiums. Those aren't separate problems. They're the same problem wearing different hats. Your building's energy efficiency (or lack of it) drives your utility cost AND your insurability. Hotels with environmental certifications like LEED or ISO 14001 are outperforming non-certified competitors on rate and occupancy. Not because guests are suddenly eco-warriors. Because those certifications correlate with newer systems, better infrastructure, and lower operating costs... which means better flow-through, which means better NOI, which means better valuations. Meanwhile, the industry is starting to whisper about "brown discounts" for properties that can't demonstrate a path to decarbonization. That's a real term. It means your asset is worth less because the next buyer's lender is going to charge more to finance it.

Look... I'm not an environmentalist. I'm an operator. I care about this because the P&L cares about this. The hotel sector contributes roughly 1% of global carbon emissions, and 75% of a hotel company's environmental impact comes from energy use. That's not a moral argument. That's a cost argument. LED retrofits, smart HVAC controls, low-flow fixtures... these aren't virtue signals. A 30% reduction in energy consumption is a 30% reduction in your second or third largest expense line. I've watched GMs ignore this stuff for years because the payback period seemed long or because "sustainability" sounded like something the corporate marketing team worried about. Those GMs are now getting calls from their asset managers asking why the property's insurance renewal looks like that.

The shift that matters isn't in the lobby. It's in the lender's office. European banks are now required to publish their Green Asset Ratio. That's coming here. When your lender has to disclose how "green" their loan portfolio is, they're going to start caring very much about your building's energy profile. Not because they love the planet. Because their regulators are grading them. And that grading flows downhill directly to your debt terms, your refinancing options, and ultimately your exit valuation. The U.S. averaged over 20 billion-dollar climate disasters annually in the last five years. Insurers aren't guessing anymore. They're repricing. If you haven't had your property assessed for climate resilience and energy efficiency in the last 18 months, you're negotiating blind with people who have better data than you do.

Operator's Take

This is what I call the Invisible P&L. The costs that never appear on your operating statement... higher cap rates at disposition, restricted lending terms, inflated insurance premiums because you never upgraded your mechanical systems... those are destroying more value than the line items you're managing every month. If you're a GM or an owner at a property built before 2010, get an energy audit done this quarter. Not the $50,000 consultant version. Start with your utility provider... most of them offer free or subsidized assessments. Know your numbers before your lender asks, because they're going to ask. And when your insurance renewal comes in hot this year (it will), you want to walk into that conversation with a capital plan, not a prayer.

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Source: Google News: CoStar Hotels
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