San Francisco Chronicle

WeWork: Co-working space won’t shell out for meat

- By Nate Lanxon

Co-working giant WeWork thinks it can save the environmen­t quicker than Elon Musk.

The startup has told its 6,000 global workers that they will no longer be able to expense meals including meat, and that it won’t pay for any red meat, poultry or pork at WeWork events. In an email to employees this week outlining the new policy, co-founder Miguel McKelvey said the firm’s upcoming internal Summer Camp retreat would offer no meat options for attendees.

“New research indicates that avoiding meat is one of the biggest things an individual can do to reduce their personal environmen­tal impact,” said McKelvey in the memo, “even more than switching to a hybrid car.”

Individual­s requiring “medical or religious” allowances are being referred to the company’s

policy team to discuss options. A WeWork spokeswoma­n confirmed the contents of the memo.

Although the stance is significan­t for the New York company, it’s far from the first startup to promote alternativ­es to animals. Juicero, a failed maker of high-priced juice machines, had instituted a similar ban on reimbursin­g employee expenses for meals at non-vegan restaurant­s.

Just Inc., formerly known as Hampton Creek, created a veganfrien­dly alternativ­e to mayonnaise and has said it plans to have what it calls clean meat on the market by year-end. Purple Carrot, the vegan meal-kit company, recently won backing from Fresh Del Monte Produce, while Berkeley startup Wild Earth is creating pet food with lab-created proteins.

American Airlines Group and Starbucks recently joined the chorus of companies pledging to phase out plastic straws and drink stirrers. And Southwest Airlines Co., in a bid to reduce allergy risk, said this week peanuts will no longer be available on flights starting Aug. 1.

WeWork’s decision follows the company’s recent internal drives to reduce plastic usage and redistribu­te waste food from its events to good causes.

Founded in 2010, WeWork was most recently valued at about $20 billion, though an executive from SoftBank Group Corp., a major WeWork investor, said at a conference in London in June that the startup was looking to raise funds at a $35 billion valuation.

In his email, McKelvey advised employees that the meat-free move would affect the company’s travel and expense policy, as well as WeWork’s Honesty Market, a self-serve food and drink kiosk system in some of its 400 co-working buildings.

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