The Caribbean’s greenest airport is in the Dutch Caribbean.
Aruba’s Queen Beatrix International Airport has secured its fourth consecutive Green Globe Certification, extending a distinction no other airport in the world currently holds.
The airport first made history in 2022 as the first globally to earn the certification, and it has maintained that status every year since — a reflection of a long-term strategy by Aruba Airport Authority N.V. (AAA) to embed sustainability into daily operations.
Green Globe is one of the travel industry’s leading frameworks for sustainable management, covering everything from environmental impact to operational efficiency and workplace standards.
This year’s certification cycle focused on a series of targeted improvements: upgraded high-efficiency chillers to reduce energy consumption, expanded waste separation systems, recycling programs including used cooking oil, and new water management processes designed to improve quality control. The airport has also continued internal education efforts, with sustainability awareness sessions for the broader airport community.
The result is a facility that is steadily reducing its footprint while integrating sustainability into how it functions day to day.
Part of a Bigger Story in Aruba
The airport’s achievement is part of a wider push across Aruba’s tourism sector — one that extends directly to where you stay.
At the center of that conversation is Bucuti & Tara Beach Resort, the adults-only hotel on Eagle Beach that continues to set the benchmark for sustainable hospitality in the Caribbean.
The property has once again earned top recognition from Green Globe, reinforcing its position as the region’s leading environmentally focused resort.
Where Sustainability Meets the Stay
At Bucuti & Tara, sustainability is not a single initiative — it shows up in how the hotel operates at every level.
You see it in carbon-neutral stays, in water conservation systems that reduce consumption across the property, and in long-running environmental programs that extend beyond the resort itself, from beach preservation to broader island partnerships.
The hotel’s approach has made it one of the most consistently recognized sustainable properties in the wider Caribbean, with a track record that continues to evolve alongside new operational practices.
From Arrival to Departure
Together, the airport and Bucuti & Tara tell a clear story about Aruba right now.
You arrive at one of the most environmentally advanced airports in the world, and you can stay at one of the Caribbean’s most sustainability-driven hotels — all within minutes of each other.
It’s a rare alignment in the region, and one that positions Aruba as a destination where sustainability is not a side initiative, but part of the full travel experience.
Caitlin Sullivan
2026-03-26 23:17:00

