The acclaimed Austrian author Marie von Ebner Eschenbach once wrote: “What we do today determines what the world will look like tomorrow.” Ahead of her time, it’s a language of sustainability that Miele – a company born in the same cultural and linguistic tradition – clearly takes to heart. In commercial laundry, it’s a sentiment that becomes daily reality. Machines run for hours, energy prices move unpredictably, and hygiene standards tighten year on year. The choices operators make about equipment, efficiency and sustainability genuinely shape how resilient their businesses will be in five, ten or fifteen years’ time.
That’s why Miele’s recent EcoVadis Gold sustainability rating, placing the company in the top 2% worldwide matters far beyond corporate recognition. It signals a shift in what the next decade of commercial laundry will look like: more efficient, more digital, more sustainable, and more accountable.
As Miele puts it: “The EcoVadis Gold Rating confirms our holistic approach to sustainability.” The company’s environmental score of 96/100 reflects decades of engineering decisions that prioritise durability, energy efficiency and lifecycle value. For operators, this translates into machines that cost less to run, last longer, and support compliance in increasingly regulated sectors.
A long sustainability arc now entering a new phase
Miele’s sustainability story is not new. For decades, the company has focused on longlife machines, reduced water consumption and improved energy efficiency. The Gold rating marks a new phase in that arc. It recognises not just product performance, but supply chain transparency, ethical procurement, carbonneutral operations and a growing commitment to circularity.
For commercial laundry operators, sustainability is becoming a procurement requirement, a cost control strategy and a reputational expectation. Choosing equipment that aligns with these pressures is now part of running a modern, resilient business.
Energy efficiency: the biggest lever operators can pull
In most commercial laundry environments, energy remains the single largest operational cost. Miele’s engineering focus on reducing consumption, from heat-pump dryers delivering up to 60% energy savings to washing machines that use less water and heat, has a direct impact on the bottom line.
Here, the thinking of W. Edwards Deming, the American engineer and quality pioneer, is relevant. He famously said: “You can’t manage what you don’t measure.” The next generation of Miele machines is built around that principle. Digital monitoring, usage data and performance analytics allow operators to see exactly where energy is being used, and where it is being wasted. Instead of vague assumptions about “high bills”, operators gain precise insight into cycle times, load factors and consumption patterns. This is measurable, actionable information that reduces costs, extends machine life and supports compliance.
Digitalisation as a sustainability tool
Miele’s MOVE platform shows how digitalisation can serve sustainability rather than distract from it. Remote monitoring reduces unnecessary engineer callouts. Predictive maintenance helps prevent breakdowns before they happen. Usage data supports optimised programming, reduced chemical waste and the avoidance of over-processing.
In sectors such as hospitality and healthcare where hygiene standards are non-negotiable, digital reporting also underpins audit trails and infectioncontrol compliance. Sustainability, efficiency and accountability are different facets of the same operational ecosystem.
Why this matters for operators in 2026
The pressures facing commercial laundry operators are intensifying:
- Rising energy costs
- Tighter hygiene and disinfection standards
- ESG reporting requirements
- The need for reliable, longlife equipment
- Growing expectations around sustainability
Miele’s Gold rating is a signal that the company is not only keeping pace with these pressures but helping to shape the direction of travel. For operators, choosing equipment aligned with this trajectory is an important strategic decision.
A turning point worth noting
Sustainability in commercial laundry is about efficiency today, resilience tomorrow and responsibility over the long term. Miele’s progression from Silver to Gold in just one year reflects a deeper truth: the future of commercial laundry will be built on machines that use less, last longer and deliver more.
And that brings us back to Marie von Ebner Eschenbach’s observation: what we do today will echo down the decades. For commercial laundry operators in 2026, the decision to invest in sustainable, data-driven equipment is not just an ethical choice but also a practical one, and increasingly, one that can bring competitive advantage.
For more expert insight, call us today on 0151 263 7451.