Burger King changes cows' diets to help save the planet

Company hopes a switch to lemongrass will reduce by a third the amount of methane the cattle produced

ABU DHABI Ð March 16, 2008: Burger King in Al Wahda Mall in Abu Dhabi (Photo by Ryan Carter / The Nation)
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Burger King will begin selling Whoppers sourced from cows that belch out less methane as the fast-food industry grapples with a questionable sustainability record.

The chain, owned by Restaurant Brands International, debuted a sandwich on Tuesday made from cattle raised on a diet supplemented with lemongrass, the company said.

That is expected to cut greenhouse gas emissions from those animals by about a third.

The new menu offering comes as a growing number of major food brands reckon with their large role in contributing to global emissions.

Meat producers and retailers have been under growing pressure from investors and consumers to cut the climate impact of their products.

“To make a real impact in the world, we need the whole industry to change,” Fernando Machado, Burger King’s global chief marketing officer, said.

“Just offering at Burger King is kind of like a drop in the ocean.”

Agriculture-related industries are second only to energy in terms of greenhouse gas emissions, and raising animals accounts for about 14.5 per cent of the global total.

Cows emit methane that’s about 30 times more powerful than carbon dioxide at warming the planet.

The logistics of selling low-methane beef at scale across a fast-food empire are daunting.

Meat suppliers and retailers will need to be ready to pay more for that sort of beef.

Any feed supplements or modified diets are likely to carry extra costs for cattle farmers who are already grappling with squeezed incomes, a problem compounded by the coronavirus pandemic.

Mr Machado did not say how much the lower-methane beef would cost Burger King, which does not plan to charge more for the limited-time product.

The burger will be on menus at selected stores in Miami, New York, Austin, Portland and Los Angeles while stocks last, the company said.

It is also partnering with suppliers in Latin America and Europe to expand on the effort.

This is not the first green initiative taken by the company, which sells meatless burgers under a partnership with Impossible Foods.

Still, the restaurant does not disclose its target for cutting emissions, making the impact of this latest step difficult to gauge.

Green product releases, meanwhile, can help companies to dodge calls for transparency while giving them a sales and public relations boost.

While initial experiments have shown that Burger King’s modified diet cuts methane emissions by an average of 33 per cent, the method is still pending validation from an academic peer review after initial experiments.

If sold on a mass scale, lower-emission beef may require the right certification to win consumer trust. The company said it will openly share its cow-diet formula to convince others to follow suit.

Meat-sourcing companies are far behind on globally accepted corporate sustainability initiatives.

Most of these companies have not yet disclosed the emissions they and their products produce, according to FAIRR, an initiative set up by environmentally minded investors.

Disclosures are key to assessing whether any of a company’s green initiatives lead to promised emissions cuts or not.

Researchers and companies have explored a range of feed supplements, vaccines and diets that would help to cut methane emitted by ruminants’ stomachs.

But so far it has been tricky because microbes responsible for creating methane have shown resistance to some methods, while other solutions may be hard to scale up.

One UK start-up is even working on methane-eating masks for cows.

Even if successful, modifying diets only partly cuts emissions, raising the need for other methods.

Some companies have pushed into a type of farming known as regenerative agriculture that is intended to cull carbon releases into the air through biodiversity and soil health.

General Mills aims to convert 405,000 hectares of land into regenerative farming by 2030.