Deutsche Welle, 28 December 2012
Huge
amounts of food are thrown away every day in the restaurant and hotel industry,
especially in the boom cities of Brazil. Now, one very famous Rio de Janeiro
hotel is taking the lead with a unique, food waste plan.
The setting
at this restaurant is simply too good to be true. A musician plays the piano as
diners sit and enjoy a meal next to an open-air swimming pool situated in the
middle of a gleaming white, Italianate-style building. The surrounding lights
shimmer in the clear blue waters.
This is not
just any restaurant. It's located in one of Rio de Janeiro's best known hotels,
the Copacabana Palace, in the glamourous suburb of the same name. Many of the
greats have stayed here, including Marlene Dietrich, Rita Hayworth, Princess
Diana and Mick Jagger.
But the
Copacabana Palace isn't resting on its laurels. In an age of disposable
culture, they want to promote sustainability. They are turning the waste
produced by the hotel's restaurants into something useful.
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The Copacabana Palace hotel has won prizes for its leadership in sustainable business practices |
In Brazil,
as in other countries, there are strict laws preventing restaurants from giving
away food to poor families or homeless shelters. So the Copacabana has begun
its own composting program, which it hopes will lead the way across the city of
Rio de Janeiro.
'At the
Copa, Copacabana'
Launched in
2008, the hotel's restaurant waste management and recycling program is well and
truly up and running. More than seven thousand liters of cooking oil and fifty
tons of bottles are recycled each year. In addition, the hotel also composts
most of its food waste too.
Paulo Andre
Pozzobon, Director of Engineering at Copacabana Palace, implemented the system.
"It started out for economic reasons, but it is also supposed to be
environmentally friendly and socially fair," he told DW in an interview.
"We
started researching and found that the cost of managing waste was high and we
wanted to reduce the volume of waste to reduce costs. We then bought a machine
to crush the organic waste produced by the restaurant, which reduced 88 percent
of the volume," he said.
Treasures
in trash
The
Copacabana Palace was awarded a sustainability prize in 2009 from the Brazilian
Association of Hotels and is now considered a leader in green business. Green
practices have spread from its restaurant into other operations. The hotel now
recycles just about everything, including buckets and other plastics and even
unused waste from pineapples and coconuts.
Although
Pozzobon says recycling can be profitable, many restaurants in Rio de Janeiro
continue to dump their food and other waste products directly into the trash.
The city's larger restaurants produce between 200 and 1,000 kilograms of food
scraps each day.
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The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization says 1.3 billion tons of food is wasted worldwide each year |
Green
entrepreneur Álvaro Oliveira runs a composting company from Rio de Janeiro
called VideVerde. He sees a niche market for his services in Brazil.
"We
went to Japan to study how they manage their waste and we visited a composting
site and studied the technology," Oliveira said in an interview with DW.
"We wanted to bring it to Brazil, where we realized there was a big demand
in composting."
Sprinkling
bacteria on top
Oliveira's
company collects the organic leftovers from restaurants and turns them into
healthy composting material.
"This
is a bio-transformation of organic waste into compost using microorganisms, or
bacteria if you will," he explained. "When we receive the organic
waste, we spread bacteria on top."
"Everyone
that works with it is excited when they see the organic waste arriving - even
though it looks like garbage and smells a little, too," he said.
"Then, in 45 days, which is the time that we manage to decompose organic
waste, they see pure organic compost."
The result
of the process can be seen, for example, in the gardening section of
supermarkets in Rio de Janeiro, where the compost is sold as fertilizer in
biodegradable plastic bags.
"You
see people buying it, and then sometimes, when I go back a month later, I hear
people who have bought the organic compost going on about it to their friends,
praising it and suggesting they buy it," Oliveira said. "It very
satisfying. It's even better than payday for us - knowing that the product
works and everyone really accepts it."
Role models
for change
Engineer Paulo
Andre Pozzobon, of Copacabana Palace, hopes examples like his and Oliveira's
will catch on throughout the Rio de Janeiro. He wants composting and combustion
plants installed city-wide.
"We
could change the whole profile of organic waste management," Pozzobon
said.
Pozzobon
believes that companies can improve their profits when they divert waste away
from landfills and thereby build a green reputation for themselves.
"The
landfills will also have a longer lifecycle too, which is good for
everyone," he said. "It's not trash, it's not waste, it's reusable,
it's recyclable, it's going back into the earth again."
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