Well, maybe not exactly ... But this week, the two food-delivery services detailed how they’re eliminating their operational impacts and continuing to engage consumers in climate-friendlier food practices.
Blue Apron partners with Aspiration to reach carbon neutrality
Image credit: Blue Apron/Facebook
This week, meal kit service Blue Apron announced
that it has successfully achieved its commitment to become carbon neutral by
March 31, 2022.
The company achieved its goal through the purchase of carbon
offsets
— offsetting its Scope 1, Scope 2 and Scope 3 emissions, based on an initial
carbon footprint analysis conducted by ethical financial services provider
Aspiration. The carbon credits — purchased from
Aspiration — cover estimated upstream and downstream emissions that including
sourcing, packaging and transporting Blue Apron’s products. Blue Apron is now
working towards implementing further systematic reductions designed to achieve a
longer-term goal of net zero.
“Sustainability has always been part of our DNA; and we believe it’s important
to conduct our business in a way that mitigates our impact on the world around
us,” said Linda Findley, Blue Apron’s President and CEO. “Achieving our
carbon neutrality goal was one of our top priorities. While we are proud of this
achievement, we know that there’s more work for us to do, along with others in
the industry, to help ensure a better world for future generations.”
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In November, Aspiration launched its Aspiration
Zero credit card — which enables consumers
to track the environmental impacts of their spending, and also help offset it;
the company plants trees for every purchase and doubles customers’ cash-back
rewards when they reach carbon zero.
In December, Blue Apron and Aspiration announced plans for a co-branded Blue
Apron Aspiration Zero Card — which will also offer cardholders rewards to help
fight the climate crisis. A first for the meal-kit industry, the Blue Apron
Aspiration Zero Card will reward cardmembers on qualifying Blue Apron purchases.
With every qualifying purchase made on the card, Aspiration will plant a tree
and let users plant an additional tree by rounding up purchases to the nearest
dollar.
While meal kit services were flagged early on as wasteful from a sustainability
standpoint, a 2019
study
found that meal kits often create fewer climate impacts per meal than grocery
store-bought food. Since then, newer offerings to emerge from the
US
and
Canada
have embedded a waste-free experience into their offering.
Too Good to Go becomes 'Carbon Neutral+', celebrates 100M surprise bags saved
Image credit: Too Good to Go/Facebook
Meanwhile, speaking of mitigating waste, Too Good to
Go — the world’s #1 marketplace for surplus
food —
has published its second annual Impact
Report to provide
transparency on the progress it is making in its food-saving work, on and off
the app.
Founded in 2016, Too Good to Go has saved over 508 million pounds of food across
17 countries. The new report is a deep dive into the company’s progress in the
US under each of its business pillars: the core marketplace of the app; schools,
public affairs, businesses, and households; as well as how it is increasing
sustainability of its core business practices.
Committed to maintaining these sustainable practices as the company continues to
grow, TGTG has partnered with Planetly — which has conducted a complete
audit and offsetting of TGTG’s carbon footprint. In 2021, Too Good to Go was
designated Carbon
Neutral+ by Planetly — an
achievement the company aspired to in last year’s impact
report.
Working with over 100,000 partners globally — including Just
Salad,
LPQ, JOKR, Gorillas and Morton Williams here in the US — the
company also celebrated the milestone of having saved 100M meals across 17
countries since its founding in 2016. TGTG’s US operations, in their first year
ever, contributed to this win — with US consumers saving over 1.2M meals by the
end of 2021, and momentum building for even greater impact in 2022.
The company also launched its first recipe collection,
Remix — an online resource for
home cooks filled with recipes, tips & tricks to help turn commonly wasted
foods and leftovers into delicious new
dishes.
“It’s time for businesses to prioritize company purpose over profit,” says
Gaeleen Quinn, US Head of Impact at Too Good to Go. “As a B Corp, we’re
leading the way to a more inclusive, equitable, and regenerative economy, and we
take our responsibility as a social impact company very seriously.”
The company launched in Canada and Ireland in July and September 2021,
respectively; and is continually measuring its carbon footprint, to keep
visibility of where emissions can be cut as the business grows.
“Being able to show a breakdown of your company’s carbon emissions is an
increasingly commonplace demand, and we’re talking from business partners to
investors and the public,” said Planetly founder and CCO Anna Alex.
“Supporting Too Good to Go through the journey from reporting to offset to
Carbon Neutral+ was an example of the projects we run every day across Europe.
It’s now crucial work, as companies realize more and more the potential they
have to do good in the world.”
Back in Europe, the Too Good to Go date-labeling
initiative —
which runs in partnership with Unilever, Danone,
Nestlé
and dozens of other food brands — expanded to two additional European countries, for a total of 11,
in 2021. The project highlights the fact that 20 percent of all food waste can
be attributed to confusion over date labeling and aims to make it clearer when
food is still good to eat.
In November 2021, the company was accepted onto the EU Platform on Food Losses
and Food
Waste
— a five-year project that brings together public and private sector players
from all EU countries to tackle food-waste issues including reducing consumer
food waste, removing barriers to food donation, introducing legally binding
food-waste reduction targets, and addressing food waste linked to date labels.
Published Apr 6, 2022 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST
Sustainable Brands Staff