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Microsoft Earns "Green" Designation

August 26, 2008

1 Min Read
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The Green Restaurant Association has announced that Microsoft's food-service facilities have earned "Certified Green Restaurant" status, reportedly the first U.S. corporate campus to be so designated. Among its “green” initiatives, Microsoft has added a composting program, maintained a recyling program, eliminated all Styrofoam containers and started converting grease and oil from its kitchens into biodiesel.

The composting program alone has diverted 20.3 million pieces of cutlery, 18.5 million plates and bowls and 22.1 million cups—109 tons of plastic in all—from landfills annually. The biodiesel initiative recycles 10,000 gallons of used fryer oil each year. Microsoft’s onsite dining operations serve around 24,000 meals daily at the corporate headquarters campus in Redmond, WA.

The Green Restaurant Association is an 18-year-old Boston-based nonprofit that consults with restaurants and food-service organizations on environmentally sustainable practices. Microsoft’s move to compostable disposables is particularly important to its Seattle area home based because the city of Seattle passed a law in July requiring all businesses to transition to recyclable and compostable containers and utensils by July 2010.

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