Published on
June 29, 2026
Image generated with Ai
Asia’s sustainable tourism shift is moving from policy language into hotel operations as the Agoda-GSTC Sustainable Tourism Academy passes 3,000 registered users in its first year. India, Thailand and Malaysia lead uptake, while Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka and Nepal form the wider user base. Japan and South Korea enter through new language support, while ASEAN backing expands relevance across Brunei Darussalam, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Timor-Leste. The common thread is practical hotel sustainability training, aligned with GSTC standards, helping accommodation businesses prepare for certification, procurement scrutiny, workforce upskilling, greener guest demand, stronger partnerships, and regional competitiveness.
Asia Sustainable Tourism Academy Becomes A B2B Training Signal
The first-year milestone of the Agoda-GSTC Sustainable Tourism Academy marks a sharper turn in Asia’s tourism economy. Sustainability is moving from destination strategies and corporate reporting decks into the daily systems of hotels, resorts, serviced apartments and smaller accommodation businesses.
The Academy has crossed 3,000 registered users in its first year. With in-person training delivered by Agoda and the Global Sustainable Tourism Council since 2022, the wider programme has reached more than 3,500 tourism professionals. For B2B travel, training is becoming commercial infrastructure. Hotels that understand sustainability standards can compete better with OTAs, tour operators, corporate travel buyers and destination partners that increasingly ask for measurable action.
India Links With Thailand And Malaysia As The Strongest User Base
India, Thailand and Malaysia form the largest user bases. India brings hotel pipeline potential. Thailand brings mature leisure infrastructure and wellness positioning. Malaysia adds connectivity, multilingual hospitality operations and urban-meets-nature appeal.
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The commonality is not a formal country-to-country alliance. It is shared participation in a GSTC-aligned learning system that gives hotel professionals a common vocabulary for sustainable tourism management, socioeconomic impact, cultural protection and environmental practice.
The second ring of adoption includes Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka and Nepal. These markets extend the Academy into island, heritage, mountain, city and resort systems. Japan and South Korea are connected through new language support, while Brunei Darussalam, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Timor-Leste sit inside the wider ASEAN expansion context.
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Country Commonality And Industry Readiness
| Country or market | Link to this news | Point of commonality | B2B implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| India, Thailand, Malaysia | Largest user bases | Strong hotel training demand | Certification and ESG readiness can scale faster |
| Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam | Key Academy markets | Nature, heritage and fast hotel growth | Better environmental and destination stewardship |
| The Philippines, Singapore | Key markets and ASEAN relevance | Island tourism, smart hubs and service workforce | Stronger supplier compliance and workforce capability |
| Sri Lanka, Nepal | Key Academy markets | Recovery, mountain and community tourism | Capacity building supports destination repositioning |
| Japan, South Korea | New language support | High-value Asian travel ecosystems | Localised content widens professional adoption |
| Brunei Darussalam, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Timor-Leste | Wider ASEAN context | Emerging or smaller tourism systems | Scalable training can reduce capability gaps |
Seven-Language Expansion Changes The Training Economics
The Academy now supports English, Vietnamese, Malay, Thai, Indonesian, Japanese and Korean. In sustainability training, language is not cosmetic. It determines whether front-office teams, procurement staff, owners, asset managers, students and general managers can convert standards into action.
The language expansion also reduces adoption cost. Smaller hotels often cannot pay for expensive consultancy or send staff abroad for specialist training. A free, on-demand platform lets them build baseline knowledge without disrupting operations.
The most popular course areas include GSTC standards and performance indicators, GSTC certification, and sustainable policy and strategy. That pattern shows that users are moving beyond awareness and preparing for implementation. For corporate buyers, this creates a wider pool of suppliers able to answer sustainability questions with more discipline.
Market Size Shows Why This Milestone Matters
| Market indicator | Latest figure | Strategic meaning |
| Global Travel & Tourism GDP contribution in 2025 | US$11.6 trillion | Sustainability skills now sit inside one of the world’s largest sectors |
| Forecast global Travel & Tourism contribution in 2026 | US$12 trillion | Buyers will demand scalable standards as the sector expands |
| Global Travel & Tourism jobs expected in 2026 | 376 million | Workforce training becomes a competitiveness issue |
| Asia-Pacific Travel & Tourism GDP in 2025 | US$3.29 trillion | Asia is the strongest growth arena for sustainable hospitality |
| ASEAN tourism GDP contribution in 2024 | US$374 billion | Southeast Asia needs standards that protect growth and assets |
| Expected ASEAN tourist arrivals by 2030 | 187 million | Visitor growth increases pressure on hotels, transport and communities |
| ADB tourism-related financing mobilised in Southeast Asia since early 2000s | US$4.7 billion | Finance is aligning with sustainable destination management |
| ADB investment pipeline through 2030 | Over US$3 billion | Infrastructure is moving towards resilient and inclusive tourism growth |
The figures explain why the Academy is more than a training announcement. Global tourism is expanding faster than the wider economy, Asia-Pacific is leading regional momentum, and ASEAN is preparing for a high-volume future. Without operational sustainability skills, growth risks intensifying energy use, waste pressure, workforce gaps and community resistance.
ASEAN Recognition Turns Training Into Capacity Building
ASEAN recognition gives the Academy policy weight. The ASEAN Tourism Sectoral Plan 2026-2030 is anchored around resilient tourism, an empowered tourism workforce, accessible and seamless travel, digital transformation and sustainable tourism. The Academy speaks directly to workforce development, digital learning and sustainable operations.
For destination authorities, the attraction is scalability. A ministry or national tourism organisation cannot train every hotel manually. A digital Academy can help standardise basic understanding across markets while still allowing local regulators, hotel associations and destination managers to add country-specific rules.
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For travel intermediaries, this makes supplier engagement more efficient. OTAs, wholesalers, tour operators and corporate booking platforms can point hotel partners towards recognised training before asking for stronger evidence on waste, water, energy, local employment, cultural impact or certification pathways.
Transport And Infrastructure Updates Strengthen The Case
The sustainable tourism training push arrives as Southeast Asia’s regional tourism plan places stronger emphasis on seamless travel and transport-linked destination development. ASEAN’s infrastructure agenda now focuses on better cross-border mobility, secondary destinations and more resilient visitor flows.
The Greater Mekong Subregion remains central to this transition. Connectivity projects have supported movement between Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam. Future ADB-supported preparation includes tourism infrastructure for inclusive and resilient growth in Cambodia, smart and sustainable tourism infrastructure in Lao PDR, and sustainable urban and infrastructure development around Lao Cai in Vietnam.
This matters for hotels because transport expansion changes demand patterns. Better corridors can shift visitors from congested gateways into secondary cities and community destinations. However, new access also creates risk when hotels lack environmental management, local sourcing discipline or community safeguards. Training therefore becomes part of infrastructure readiness, not only human resources.
What Changes For Hotel Groups, SMEs And Travel Buyers
Large hotel groups can use the Academy as a baseline training layer across regional portfolios. It can support internal ESG programmes, brand standards, owner discussions and pre-certification preparation. For asset-light hotel companies, a shared digital platform helps align franchised or managed properties that operate under different local conditions.
Independent hotels can learn the language of sustainability without entering a costly advisory process at the first step. That improves their ability to work with OTAs, destination management companies, MICE planners and corporate buyers that increasingly prefer documented sustainability practices.
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For B2B travel buyers, the Academy may reduce supplier education friction. A buyer can ask whether a hotel team has completed recognised sustainability modules before moving into deeper due diligence. That does not replace certification. It improves the starting point.
Outlook For Asia’s Sustainable Hospitality Race
The next phase will depend on completion rates, corporate adoption, hotel association uptake and the ability to move users from training into measurable property-level change. The strongest commercial impact will come when hotels connect Academy learning with procurement policy, energy tracking, waste reduction, staff retention, local hiring, cultural programming and transparent guest communication.
For Asia’s travel industry, the direction is unmistakable. Sustainable tourism is becoming a skills market. Countries that treat training as infrastructure will move faster. Hotels that treat standards as commercial tools will gain trust earlier. The Academy has crossed only its first milestone, but its real value may be in creating a shared operating language for the next decade of Asian tourism growth.
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