Global Times - Weekend

Eco-eating, check!

▶ On the menu at a UK restaurant: carbon footprint

- AFP

The menu at The Canteen in southwest England doesn’t just let diners know how much a dish costs. They can also check its carbon footprint.

The carrot and beetroot pakora with yoghurt sauce is responsibl­e for just 16 grams of CO2 emissions. The aubergines with a miso and harissa sauce with tabbouleh and Zaatar toast caused 675 grams of carbon dioxide.

As customers weigh their options, the menu at the vegetarian restaurant in Bristol includes a comparison with a dish that it does not serve: the emissions from a UK-produced hamburger.

“Three kilos for a burger, wow! I can’t believe it,” exclaimed Enyioma Anomelechi, a 37-year-old diner sipping a beer outside in the sunshine.

The menu notes that a real beef burger’s emissions are “10 times the amount of its vegan alternativ­e.”

The carbon footprints of businesses and consumers have come under growing scrutiny as countries scramble to limit global temperatur­e increases to 1.5C and to achieve netzero emission by 2050.

The Canteen became, in July, the first restaurant to agree to put its carbon footprint on the menu under a campaign spearheade­d by UK vegan campaignin­g charity Viva!

The restaurant’s manager, Liam Stock, called the move a way to “see what we are doing; to understand and improve ourselves.”

The average British person has an annual carbon footprint of more than 10 tons, according to UK government figures.

The UK has set the ambitious goal of reducing harmful emissions by 78 percent by 2035, compared with 1990 figures, in order to meet its internatio­nal climate change commitment­s.

‘Climate emergency’

Switching to a plant-based diet is one of the most effective ways for an individual to reduce their carbon footprint, experts from the UN’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change said in April.

The livestock industry replaces CO2-absorbing forests with land for grazing and soy crops for cattle feed. The animals also belch huge amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

Whether diners will let carbon footprints influence their order choices remains to be seen, but Stock said the menu innovation has stoked interest and support.

“In England if you’re a big chain restaurant, it’s the law that you have to have calories on (the menu),” he said.

“But a lot of people are saying... they’re more interested in carbon.”

While Anomelechi noted the “huge” difference in emissions between a hamburger and other dishes, he said he did not necessaril­y want to be burdened with knowing his order’s calorie count or carbon footprint.

“When I go out to eat I just want to enjoy,” he added, noting he would be more inclined to change his ways when grocery shopping.

‘Cradle to store’

Stock said he knew his restaurant’s dishes would score low carbon footprints, as most of his ingredient­s are sourced regionally.

“We didn’t have to change anything,” he said, while admitting some surprises, such as learning that imported spices drive up emissions.

To calculate the dishes’ footprints, The Canteen sent its recipes and the source of the ingredient­s to a specialize­d company called MyEmission­s.

It is able to calculate the carbon impact from “cradle to store,” taking into account farming, processing, transport and packaging.

“If I was choosing between two dishes, maybe depending on how hungry I was, I might choose the one with a lower footprint,” said Nathan Johnson, a 43-year-old diner at the restaurant.

That day, he opted for the chef’s salad, which racks up 162 grams of carbon.

Another diner, 29-year-old Emma Harvey, also backed the idea of increased awareness of carbon footprints “and the ethical effects of the food that we’re eating.”

“We have to incorporat­e things (like) that into everyday life,” added Harvey.

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 ?? Photos: IC ?? Above: Diners enjoy a meal at a bar. Vegan burgers with avocado, beetroot and sauce
Photos: IC Above: Diners enjoy a meal at a bar. Vegan burgers with avocado, beetroot and sauce

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