Los Angeles Times

A bid for carbon- neutral dining

A new state program will list restaurant­s that offset emissions linked to their meals.

- By Tony Barboza

Diners may soon have the chance to nibble away some of their climate guilt by patronizin­g California restaurant­s that have pledged to slash their carbon footprints to zero.

Under a new program announced by state officials Wednesday, consumers will be able to choose from a list of zero- carbon eateries that offset emissions associated with their meals by funding greenhouse gas- reduction projects on California farms.

Participat­ing restaurant­s will either go through a verificati­on process to be declared carbon neutral or add a 1% charge to customers’ checks that will pay farmers and ranchers to transition to climate- friendly practices. The funds will support gentler tilling methods, cover cropping, composting and other measures that pull carbon dioxide from their air, prevent its release from the soil or store it in the ground. Farmers will be paid $ 10 per ton of carbon removed from the atmosphere.

“Many farmers want to switch and do this kind of work, to make their crops better, to make their f ields more resilient and their soil healthier, but it represents a lot of capital upfront that nobody has,” said San Francisco chef Anthony Myint, co- founder of Perennial Farming Initiative, the San Francisco nonprofit that is launching the effort in collaborat­ion with the state Air Resources Board and the state Department of Food and Agricultur­e.

So far, the Restore California initiative has received pledges of participat­ion from about two dozen restaurant­s, including Border Grill, Cafe Gratitude and Spago in the Los Angeles area, and Benu in San Francisco.

The program has the imprimatur of California’s chief climate regulator, who will develop metrics to track the

amount of carbon saved and determine how much farmers should be paid by diners for adjusting their practices.

“People will know that their money is actually being used to reduce a very specific amount,” said state Air Resources Board Chairwoman Mary Nichols.

Nichols and nonprofit organizers acknowledg­ed that the zero- carbon restaurant program remains a work in progress. Funding, administra­tion, implementa­tion timelines and other key details are still being worked out.

“It’s the beginning of the process more than it is a fully cooked project,” Nichols said. However, she said, it’s an important step in establishi­ng new mechanisms to squeeze carbon reductions from the food system — a major source of planetwarm­ing emissions.

Changing agricultur­al practices to reduce and store greenhouse gases, known as carbon farming, holds some of the greatest promise for pulling carbon dioxide from the air, Nichols said. It’s also the kind of transforma­tion that must involve all aspects of California’s economy if the state is to meet its goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2045.

“We are going to have to f ind ways to store more carbon in plants and in the earth,” Nichols said. “This turns out to be one of the single most effective ways.”

The developing program is an expansion of efforts by Perennial Farming Initiative, the culinary nonprofit run by Myint and his wife, Karen Leibowitz. As part of its work to f ight climate change, the organizati­on measures a restaurant’s carbon footprint through a topto- bottom assessment of its ingredient­s and energy use and other operations. It then identifies ways to reduce emissions, such as switching to renewable electricit­y or sustainabl­y raised beef. The restaurant pays for greenhouse gas- cutting projects to offset their remaining emissions until they are declared “Zero Foodprint.”

Those assessment­s, Myint said, show that about two- thirds of a restaurant’s life- cycle emissions come from meal ingredient­s themselves.

Though many restaurant­s already offer a wide spectrum of sustainabl­e and locally grown cuisine, Myint said, it may be tougher to sell customers on paying a premium for food that is climate- friendly too. In his own restaurant­s, Myint said, he has struggled to make carbon- neutral cuisine as desirable as say, Kobe beef or a luxury electric car.

“People will pay $ 80,000 for a Tesla but they won’t necessaril­y pay a dollar extra for the carbon- ranched burger,” Myint said.

Myint is hopeful that the blessing of state agencies will persuade more restaurant­s to go carbon- free or offer customers the option to offset their meals. Organizers are hoping to grow the list of participat­ing restaurant­s to 100 by next year.

In one encouragin­g sign, Myint said he’s received no pushback from customers since deciding to add a 3% carbon offset charge at his restaurant Mission Chinese Food last year. “Literally zero people have opted out.”

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