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A daily in-depth look at current events in the Czech Republic.
First Czech five star hotel wins EU ecological award[09-04-2008 13:20 UTC]
By Jamie Brindley
The first five star hotel in the Czech Republic has been awarded the
prestigious EU-Eco Label award for environmental friendliness. The Hotel
Chateau Mcely near Nymburk in the central Bohemian countryside may be
luxuriously equipped and charge up to 44 000Kc (2,700 US dollars) a night
for it's most exclusive suite, but it is certainly not lavish at the
expense of the environment. Every care has been taken to ensure that while
guests are pampered and indulged, they are treated in a way which is
ecologically responsible as well as. This has meant that the hotel, located
in a restored and reconstructed Czech chateau, is now proudly able to show
the EU flower mark alongside its five stars. Jamie Brindley spoke to the
owner and manger of the project, Jim Cusumano, about how the hotel has gone
about setting its environmental standards so high.
"The features that make it environmentally friendly are a number of
things. One is that we created an energy system generating hot water and
heating the castle, which uses renewable energy sources. Basically what we
have is a high technology system that burns spent sawdust from mills.
That's one thing, the second is that we put into the castle a system that
has its own sewage treatment and which takes the recovered water to water
the lawns and the trees throughout the property. We also recycle not only
our own waste but also the waste of all of the guests in the rooms. We
applied for application to the European Union through the Ministry, and we
are one of two hotels in all of central Europe that have the European Union
green designation and are five star hotels."
Do you think that your hotel will go some way to abolishing the stereotype
that an environmentally minded hotel will be a bit 'rough-and-ready' and
not too comfortable? It has after all proved that luxury and a sense of
environmental responsibility aren't mutually exclusive.
"That is exactly what I think we have demonstrated- that you have a
five star hotel which is luxurious, we have got people coming from all
around the world, not just from the Czech market, and yet on top of that we
are also a 'green' hotel - so they are not mutually exclusive."
Were you surprised when you found out that you were the first hotel in the
Czech Republic to be given this award?
"Yes we were. The reason we obtained it was my wife; she went to a
conference and heard a lot of presentations here in Prague about hotels
which are 'green' hotels- and they are all one star, two star, three star
hotels- and she heard what they did to qualify for the certification and
she said 'Oh my Goodness, we've done so much more than that.' So, we
applied to the Ministry and they were absolutely astounded to see what
Chateau Mcely was doing as a five star hotel, and so they recommended us to
the European Union, and in December 2007 we received a designation and a
right to use the green stamp."
When your guests arrive at the hotel do they all take an active interest
in what you are doing to be more environmentally friendly?
"Yes, actually they do. I've been quite astounded. One thing I notice
is that we find people who are interested in a five star hotel,
surprisingly, when they find out that they can get the luxury that they are
looking for, but also stay in a place which is using less energy and being
more friendly to the environment, then they see that as a 'plus'. They are
very co-operative, by and large most people are very co-operative in that
respect."
Also in this edition:
Czech customs officials have concluded an ongoing international operation
designed to bust drugs networks smuggling cocaine to Europe. They have
hailed the action as a success, with 31 people arrested for serious
drug-related offenses. The police now view the Czech Republic as not only a
transit country, but increasingly also as a final destination for many of
the world’s illegal narcotics.
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What is more important: protecting nature or protecting municipal property?
This question is at the heart of a dispute between the Ministry of
Environment and municipalities bordering on the Šumava National Park.
Environment Minister Martin Bursík this week confirmed his decision to
keep the most valuable parts of the Šumava National Park untouched,
declining an appeal filed by 15 local municipalities for him to allow trees
to be cut down and other measures. They argue that leaving the forest
untouched may cause an epidemic of bark-beetle.
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Last month the Minister for Human Rights and Minorities Džamila
Stehlíková proposed legislation which would ban the spanking or smacking
of children on the grounds that in some cases such treatment can border on
child abuse. The introduction of such legislation would see the Czech
Republic join other EU countries, including neighbouring Germany. But so
far, a majority of ordinary Czechs have said they are against such a move.
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