From the Disney Parks Blog and written by: Shelby Grasser
Warm, crunchy churros, savory-sweet turkey legs, pan-seared salmon … is your mouth watering yet? Disney Parks food is iconic. But have you ever wondered what happens to food that isn’t eaten?
I know you’re hungry to learn more. The answer is simple: it continues its journey – from farm, to fork, to food bank and beyond. It’s better for the planet and better for people, and it’s all part of Disney Planet Possible.
@disneyparks From farm to fork, to food bank and beyond! :seedling::fork_and_knife:#DisneyPlanetPossible #Disney #DisneyParks #EcoFriendly #EarthMonth #Sustainability #FoodWaste ♬ original sound – Disney Parks
“Across Disney Parks, we are committed to reducing food waste with
a goal of zero waste to landfill,” explained Chef Michael Gonsalves, a chef at Walt
Disney World Resort. “To aid in this effort, we try to maximize food waste
diversion. Pushing the bar on food quality and innovation is one thing, but
most important is the consideration of our carbon footprint and its impacts on
our world. The vision and dedication to drive to sustainable zero-waste models
should be the goal for everyone on this planet if we plan to see it thrive for
generations to come.”
The full-circle food cycle begins with menu planning to predict how many meals we’ll serve in our parks each day. This helps prevent food waste before it begins. After a menu plan is made, we harvest fresh fruits and vegetables, some of which are grown on Disney property! Chef Michael’s team, Chef Damon Lauder and Sous Chef Heather Sylvester, harvest fresh produce and collect honey daily, all produced right on-site. If you’ve ever eaten at The Land pavilion in EPCOT, you may have enjoyed some of the fresh, local produce grown inside the attraction.
Even after you’re home and thinking about that delicious Disney meal, the journey of your food isn’t over. Any scraps left behind are collected in designated food waste bins. Across Disney Parks, food waste is used in many ways.
FOOD FOR
PLANTS AND ANIMALS
Composting is an excellent way to recycle food waste and reduce environmental impact. At Walt Disney World Resort, food waste is sent to an off-site commercial composting facility to be turned into nutrient-rich soil for gardening, farming, and landscaping. The compost soil is even used to fertilize plants at Disney’s Animal Kingdom! With the help of a Reliable Skip service in Cheltenham, individuals and businesses can also contribute to sustainable waste management by efficiently disposing of organic waste through composting or other eco-friendly methods.
ENERGY
When you
take the Grand Circle Tour at Disneyland Resort, does it ever smell like fries?
That’s because the steam trains run on biodiesel! Used cooking oil from the
restaurants around the resort helps fuel all five steam trains and the Mark
Twain Riverboat. This eliminates approximately 200,000 gallons of petroleum
diesel per year. For these food waste reduction efforts and many more,
Disneyland Resort was recently awarded the “Food Recovery Challenge Award” from
the US Environmental Protection Agency and the “SEAL Business
Sustainability Award” for in the environmental initiative category for managing
food waste.
Hong Kong Disneyland converts their food scraps into energy – and diverts food waste from landfills in the process – by sending 360 tons of food waste to the government’s anaerobic digestion facility in 2021. Disneyland Paris recovers up to 93% of its food waste, which is transformed into energy through biomethanization. In 2019, 2,061 tons of food waste were processed to produce 745 MWh of energy, the equivalent of the annual consumption of 229 families.
Prepared, but not served, meals eligible for human consumption are donated to local food banks such as Second Harvest Food Bank. Since March 2020, we have donated more than $14.6 million worth of food to hunger-relief organizations globally – the equivalent of more than 2.1 million meals! Here are a few of my favorite food donation facts from around Disney Parks:
- In 2021
alone, Walt Disney World Resort donated more than 550,000 pounds of excess
prepared food to Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida with Disney
VoluntEARS spending nearly 3,000 hours at the warehouse, helping to sort and
pack food delivered across the region. The resort also donated $500,000 to
further support the organization and its mission to create hope and nourish
lives through a powerful hunger relief network. - Disneyland
Resort provided more than 90,000 meals to the Orange County community in
2021. And in 2019, Disneyland Resort’s combined efforts avoided more than
8 million pounds of food from landfills. - Hong Kong
Disneyland joined with Foodlink Foundation to launch Disney Meal Box Express.
Since June 2021, the program has provided around 12,500 healthy, freshly cooked
meal boxes to those most impacted by the pandemic across four Hong Kong
districts. The donations are prepared every Thursday by more than 200 Disney
VoluntEARS and the Food & Beverage team.
“We’re incredibly thankful for the support Walt Disney World Resort and its cast members have shown us over the years,” said Greg Higgerson, Chief Development Officer at Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida. “It’s because of this support that we’re one step closer to closing the gap of unmet needs in Central Florida.”
Each year, over one-third of all
food produced in the U.S. is never eaten.
The resources attributed to U.S. food loss and waste are equivalent to
140 million acres of agricultural land, an area the size of California and New
York combined*. That’s why we are working to make a difference where we can at
Disney Parks.
Significant resources go into growing, processing, packaging,
storing, and distributing food. Of course, the most important action we can
take to reduce the environmental impacts of uneaten food is to prevent that
food from becoming waste in the first place. We are proud that through Disney
Planet Possible, we are taking action to change our planet’s story, one meal at
a time.
Thanks for following along on the journey from farm, to fork, to
food bank and beyond. What questions do you have about the process? Let us know
in the comments! And don’t forget to join us to picture what’s possible this
Earth Month by sharing images of what gives you hope for the future of the
planet with #DisneyPlanetPossible.
*Source: https://www.epa.gov/land-research/farm-kitchen-environmental-impacts-us-food-waste
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