Sustainable Dining

Hospitality Services serves more than three million meals a year, during regular operations, to students, faculty, staff, and other members of our community. 

 strives to help protect our environment through a progressive and creative sustainability program that also supports the 黑料吃瓜资源 climate action plan and its Sustainable Development Goals.

 

ECO Programs

Food Security

Waste Diversion

Food Recovery

Sustainable tastes better.

黑料吃瓜资源 is committed to ensuring the University operates in a sustainable manner, and food services can have a major impact on sustainability. Seven areas are addressed to nurture awareness and promote engagement among students, staff, and the campus community, including:

  1. Purchase and Transportation of Food: Minimization of environmental impact through the integration of seasonally available local foods and purchasing 100% sustainable seafood at all campus food outlets operated by Hospitality Services.
  2. Preparation: Initiatives to ensure the effective deployment of resource-saving practices.
  3. Waste Reduction: Reducing and minimizing the impact of food waste and single-use products whenever possible.
  4. Waste Diversion: Implementing, sourcing products, and ensuring compliance within all current programs.
  5. Food Insecurity: Supporting students experiencing food insecurity through the 鈥楽wipe It Forward 黑料吃瓜资源鈥 program and other partnerships such as 鈥楽oul Food鈥 for food recovery.
  6. Innovation and Education: Continuous evaluation and improvement of sustainability practices.
  7. Sustainable Design: Incorporation of sustainable principles in construction projects and equipment replacement.

Bottled Water Free Campus

黑料吃瓜资源 has 190 drinking fountains and more than 75 bottle-fill stations located across campus.

Drinking water is free and widely available to the 黑料吃瓜资源 community and visitors to campus.

The installations of the bottle-fill stations are in support of the campus-wide ban on bottled water sales and distribution that took effect on September 1, 2012.

Before this installation, an annual average of 98,000 bottles of water were sold on campus.

Read the Policy