Retrieve your moth-nibbled dinner jacket from the darkest recess of the
wardrobe and loosen your polyester cummerbund another notch… yes, it’s time to
fall in for the 17th annual Gongs In Travel, aka The GITs, the awards
corporate travel bosses really don’t want adorning their office walls. Pour
yourself a schooner of oesophagus-challenging British cooking sherry and let’s
dive in.
Most Astounding Airline Contribution To Fighting Global Warming
JOINT-WINNER: SWISS, for Green Fares between Zurich and Geneva
SWISS hit on the brainwave of introducing, in its own words, “Green Fares”
that offer “sustainable flying” between Zurich and Geneva, only 143 miles apart.
Your ticket automatically includes “offsetting of CO2 emissions” through
contributions to sustainable aviation fuel and climate protection projects. Just
a thought, but might a fare for one of the 43 direct trains running each weekday
in either direction between the cities be that tiniest bit greener?
JOINT-WINNER: Japan Airlines, for Any Wear, Anywhere
Polar bears on melting ice floes relax, JAL is here to help. In July the carrier
launched a year-long fly-light trial for travellers wanting to make a
“sustainable choice”. Passengers can leave
their own clothes at home (apart, presumably, from the ones they wear on board
– although I do recall a plan once to launch flights for naturists) and avail
themselves of rented apparel at their destination. By JAL’s own estimation, that’s
7.5kg in CO2 emissions saved by taking 10kg less luggage from Tokyo to New York
– out of, according to emissions calculator provider Chooose, 696kg of CO2 per
passenger flying in economy and 2.16 tonnes in business class. Decide for
yourself what colour these clothes are washed in.
The Uncle Sam Golden Bullet For Most Alarming “Only in America” Travel
Stat
WINNER: Transportation Security Administration
The TSA intercepted, wait for it, 6,542 firearms at airport security
checkpoints in 2022, it was revealed in February this year. But that’s not the
scariest figure: that honour belongs to the fact 88 per cent of them were
loaded. The number of confiscations is set to hit a new high in 2023, and the
percentage that were loaded has climbed above 90 per cent. It makes the salami I once
smuggled through customs at London Gatwick seem pretty innocuous now.
The Hartley’s Glass Jar For Putting Jam On The
Cohen Family Table in 2023
WINNER: European Union regulation
New Distribution Capability made much more of a comeback than I would
have liked after a couple of years when I foolishly hoped I might never have to
cover it again. But trying to explain complicated EU rules no one really
understood, least of all me, proved to deliver reassuringly regular income in 2023. The
Third Payment Services Directive, the Corporate Sustainability Reporting
Directive, the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive and – the one I
still have only the foggiest comprehension of – the Multimodal Digital Mobility
Services Regulation ranked among this year’s greatest hits. I look forward to
walking you through them next time we’re in a bar together.
Fyffe Banana Skins Cup For Biggest
Transport Cock-up of the Year
RUNNER-UP: Avanti West Coast rail, UK
On 27 January this not universally loved UK rail franchise announced it
would cancel many trains the following day owing to “exceptional amounts of
leave being taken this month” by its staff. From the old excuse of “leaves on the
line” to “leave off the line” then.
WINNER: German construction workers
On 15 February, labourers building a rail extension near Frankfurt stuck
a drill through a bunch of fibre-optic cables. Deutsche Bahn trains were totally
unaffected, but the severance grounded the entire Lufthansa fleet, leaving
thousands of travellers stranded. And in the final irony Lufthansa had
to put its domestic passengers on to trains instead. Perhaps I have learned the
meaning of “multimodal” after all.
Most Blushable Excuse For Missing Business Travel Show Europe
WINNER: [Travel manager name redacted, company name redacted],
Sweden
In my capacity as conference producer of BTSE I receive a wide variety of
reasons for people declining when I invite them to speak – but this refusal
from one travel manager was a first. “Hi Amon,” they wrote, “Thank you for the
consideration – seems great fun! Unfortunately I will not be able to attend
this time as I will be on a business strip with our management team.” I know
Scandinavians are a liberated lot, but this takes team-building that little bit
too far in my opinion.
Hallmark Trophy For
The Politician Least Likely to Receive a Christmas Card from UK Business Travel
Executives, Especially Northern Ones
WINNER: The
Right Honourable Rishi Sunak MP, Prime Minister
In October, Rishi Sunak travelled to Manchester to tell the Conservative
Party conference that the UK’s new HS2 high-speed rail link will no longer
travel from that sun-kissed city to central London, as had been promised for
many years. It will now run from Marston Green, a village on the eastern edge
of Birmingham, to Old Oak Common, a semi-industrial wasteland adjoining Wormwood
Scrubs prison in the nether reaches of West London. “It seems like if you live
north of Birmingham you are expected to stay there,” was the verdict of one
disrguntled Mancunian travel professional on LinkedIn.
Travel Industry Celebrity Lookalike Of The Year
WINNER: Jeroen van Velzen, Emburse
A new category for 2023! Is it just me, or has anyone
else noticed that lovable, flowing-maned mobile travel tech pioneer Jeroen van
Velzen looks just the tiniest bit like Brentford Football Club manager and
thinking mature woman’s heart-throb (if the present Mrs Cohen is anyone to
judge by, though not quite as much as Gary Lineker) Thomas Frank? If you can do
better, and undoubtedly you can, send me your own lookalike nominations for
2024.
See also: The 16th annual GITs (2022)