Climate Change

carrots

What does what’s on your plate have to do with climate change? A lot!

Research has shown that greenhouse gases created by food production, distribution, and waste are responsible for one-third of global emissions. A handful of simple dietary choices and practices can have the same impact as switching from driving a large SUV to a more fuel-efficient sedan.

What Bon Appétit is doing

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Launched in 2007, our Low Carbon Diet program was the product of two years of research. We designed the Low Carbon Diet to reduce our carbon “foodprint.” And we did it, meeting our goals and resulting in reductions of the equivalent of approximately 5 million pounds of carbon dioxide each month.

After a few years of happily maintaining our weight, we decided it was time to mentally move from a time-limited diet aimed at a quick reduction to a long-term, sustained way of living. Enter the Low Carbon Lifestyle, a new set of commitments that we can live for the foreseeable future and continue our dedication to reducing the climate-changing impacts of our food choices. We consulted with food and climate change experts across the country, from the Environmental Working Group to the Union of Concerned Scientists and Rainforest Alliance. We settled on these four focus areas:

    1. Prioritizing Plant-Based Proteins:
      • Serving reasonable, clearly defined portions of animal proteins based on U.S. Dietary Guidelines recommendations
      • Skewing the menu mix away from beef and cheese
      • Emphasizing plant-based proteins
      • Tracking the ounces of various proteins we serve per guest per meal period, to make sure we stay on target
    2. foodrecoveryhierarchyPreventing and Reducing Food Waste: Prioritizing waste reduction according to the EPA Food Recovery Hierarchy, to make landfills our last resort.
      • Requiring our teams to actively engage in preventing waste at the source, by tracking their participation in our Imperfectly Delicious Produce program
      • Continuing to prevent waste in their kitchens and recording their efforts using a two-month-long in-house program or a third-party waste-tracking program such as Lean Path
      • Donating leftovers to local hunger relief organizations on a regular, not occasional basis.  (We have vowed that by 2018, 80% of our accounts will be Food Recovery Certified.)
    3. Trimming Transportation: Examining both distance traveled and, more critically, the mode of transportation when we’re making purchasing decisions in order to prioritize carbon-efficient transportation of food.
      • No air-freighted seafood
      • Restricting purchases of vegetables, meat, non-tropical fruit, and bottled water to North America
      • Encouraging purchases of seasonal and regional fruits and vegetables
      • Training chefs and managers how to prioritize tropical fruit that is typically boated or trucked versus air-freighted when needed
    4. Decreasing Deforestation: Supporting sustainable forestry and agricultural management through our purchasing practices.
      • Purchasing meat from North American farms and ranches (fed with U.S.-grown crops)
      • Opting for paper products that are FSC Certified and/or made from recycled content
      • Setting measurable goals for purchasing coffee from Certified Organic, shade-grown, Rainforest Alliance or Bird Friendly certified (by the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center) farms

At the same time, just like a diet plan often asks you to get on a scale, we’re weighing our progress on a monthly basis using our new Food Standards Dashboard to make sure we stay on track with our goals.

Learn more