I’ve recently learned of a different way of limiting corporate travel, and I think it’s brilliant.

Every company travel policy I’d heard of until yesterday has been a variation on the same theme:

There’s an annual a travel budget. Management may or may not have priority and there may be limitations on who can travel together, but in the end the true limit is the amount of money in the budget.

The policy I learned of yesterday is almost, but not quite, unlike the others. The budget isn’t about money. It’s about CO2 emissions. Each department gets a specific amount of CO2 emissions for travel for the year.

The implications are interesting:

Travel within Europe has become train first as a natural consequence. Intercontinental travel has been reduced by a significant amount.

It’s an absolutely amazing policy and it should be the standard corporate travel policy everywhere.

@taf we'll go back to traveling for business with ships (some of them are quite nice so no complaints)
@drizzy @taf and you could work as you travel
@peterbrown @drizzy With great success - at least if traveling first class. One of my colleagues went from Copenhagen to Amsterdam by train last month. Not only did he make it to the conference and home again fairly well rested and without travel stress, he also managed a solid 8 hours of work each way - in comfort and without the disturbances normally had in our open office environment.