An Inconvenient Tooth: Food Is Major Contributor to Climate Change

Bon Appétit Management Company’s New Low Carbon Diet aims to take bite out of global warming

Palo Alto, Calif. (April 17, 2007) -Global warming activists have a new ally in their fight to save the planet lunch. It turns out that food (and all the energy it takes to make it) is one of the largest human activities contributing to global warming. The average American creates 2.8 tons of CO2 emissions each year by eating even more than the 2.2 tons each person generates by driving, according to recent research (Eshel and Martin, 2006).

Beginning on Earth Day, 2007, Bon Appétit Management Company – the nation’s pioneer in “greening” food service, is launching a national campaign to reduce their own greenhouse gas emissions and help their guests do the same.

With 400 cafés in corporations, universities and specialty venues nationwide including Yahoo!, Oberlin College and the Seattle Art Museum – Bon Appétit will encourage chefs and diners to think about how their food choices could help ease the climate crisis.

“It is insane to sit down to lunch in Los Angeles and drink water that has traveled 5,000 miles from Fiji,” said Helene York, director of the Bon Appétit Management Company Foundation, the program’s organizer. “We are scrutinizing our own food habits to reduce our carbon footprint as a company, and we are helping our guests do the same on an individual level.”

The Low Carbon Diet will include:

  • Reducing the use of beef by 25% -Livestock production is responsible for 18% of greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Sourcing all meat and poultry from North America -80% of the energy used by the food system comes not from growing food, but from transporting and processing it.
  • Sourcing nearly all fruits and vegetables from North America, using seasonal local produce as a first preference and using tropical fruits only as “special occasion” ingredients -Most bananas have traveled 3,000 miles in high-speed refrigerated ships to reach an American breakfast plate. A local apple might be grown within 10 miles.
  • Serving only domestic bottled water and reducing waste from plastic bottles -Americans throw away 40 million plastic water bottles every day.
  • Reducing food waste -Goal of 25% reduction in three years or less.
  • Auditing the energy efficiency of kitchen equipment -In home or commercial kitchens energy losses of up to 30% can be easily corrected for very low cost.

In addition, beginning on Low Carbon Diet Day in April 2008, Bon Appétit Management Company will introduce a carbon point system so that guests can calculate the impact of their personal food choices and thereby make knowledgeable decisions and/or adjustments to their own diet.

Bon Appétit, which serves more than 80 million meals per year, has taken a radical approach to the business of food service by bringing sustainably-grown foods to the American public through their Farm to Fork standard (buying from local farmers and artisan producers), initiatives in sustainable seafood, milk without artificial hormones, antibiotic reduction in poultry and meat, trans-fat free cooking, cage-free eggs, and their stand against animal cloning.

“The Low Carbon Diet is about eating in a way that is conscious of environmental impact. It also happens to be about a $400 million company making radical decisions that are smart business,” added York. “Our Low Carbon Diet gets to the heart of an issue that has been conspicuously absent from the global warming conversation.”

About Bon Appétit Management Company
Bon Appétit Management Co. is an onsite restaurant company offering full food service management to corporations, universities and specialty venues. Bon Appétit is committed to sourcing sustainable, local foods for all cafés throughout the country. A pioneer in environmentally sound sourcing policies, Bon Appétit has developed programs with Environmental Defense, the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch, the Humane Society of the United States, and other leading conservation organizations. Based in Palo Alto, CA, Bon Appétit has more than 400 cafés in 28 states, including Oracle Corporation, American University and the Getty Center. www.bamco.com