McDonald's Corporation : McDonald's Celebrates 90 Groundbreaking Advancements in Environmental Practices Around the World
04/18/2012| 12:22pm US/Eastern

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Innovations in Energy Savings, Recycling & Other
Environment-Focused Areas
OAK BROOK, IL, Apr 18, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) --Reusing
air conditioning condensation to water plants and clean.
Repurposing advertising banners into fashionable tote bags.
Recycling used cooking oil to power generators at a hospital.
Today, McDonald's Corp. (NYSE: MCD) celebrates these and
dozens more examples of passion and innovation in the 2012
Global Best of Green report.
Best of Green is a collection of best practices that focus on
the environment and provide tangible positive impact for the
company's business and brand. The report illustrates
progress in eight categories -- energy, packaging,
anti-littering, recycling, logistics, communications, green
building, and greening the workplace.
"Our commitment to environmental sustainability truly
comes to life in our restaurants," said Jeff Stratton,
McDonald's chief restaurant officer. "By
implementing these solutions, McDonald's demonstrates its
commitment to building a better business through effective
environmental practices around the world."
"I'm proud of the progress in all these areas and
I'm especially excited to see the number of impactful
advancements in energy/carbon reduction and green building --
two of our key planet priorities," said Bob Langert,
McDonald's vice president of Sustainability.
2012 Best of Green includes more than 20 energy-efficiency
initiatives, including carbon-reduction practices, and green
building advancements in more than a dozen markets around the
world.
In the U.S., for example, McDonald's USA has made a
national commitment to match 30 percent of its electricity
use at company-owned restaurants in 2012 with renewable
energy credits from U.S. wind sources. Renewable energy
credits help fund the development of new renewable energy
resources to increase the amount of available clean energy
for everyone.
Other report highlights include:
-- A maintenance technician at a McDonald's restaurant in
Brazil suggested re-using condensation generated by the air
conditioning unit. The resulting collection, storage and
re-use system provided water for plants and cleaning external
areas, and reduced daily water consumption 15 percent.
-- Restaurant crew at McDonald's restaurants in the U.K.
created new environmental best practices, leading to key
changes including a 20 percent increase in cardboard
recycling.
-- McDonald's focus on sustainable meetings is
illustrated by actions at the 2011 gathering of 16,000 U.S.
Owner-Operators, restaurant managers, staff and suppliers.
More than half the waste stream was diverted and 1.35 tons of
waste kept out of the landfill through soap/amenity
recycling. Additional recycling initiatives kept more than 85
tons out of the landfill.
McDonald's collaborated with key external stakeholders to
recognize "best of the best" actions by selecting
"Planet Champions" for each report category. The
selection committee voted for projects and included
representatives from BSR, Ceres, Conservation International,
World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and McDonald's. They made their
selections based on the level of innovation, environmental
and business impacts, scalability and business integration.
The 2012 McDonald's "Planet Champions" are:
-- Energy: McDonald's Europe's innovative carbon
footprint measurement "toolkit" sets the stage for
identifying future carbon reduction opportunities
-- Packaging: McDonald's Canada's switch to
unbleached napkins and bags leads to positive environmental,
customer and cost savings impacts
-- Anti-Littering: Through a focus on litter reduction for
more than 20 years, McDonald's Australia works to
establish a leadership position by engaging its restaurant
employees, staff and customers to control the impacts of
litter around restaurants in Australia
-- Recycling & Waste Reduction: McDonald's Austria
achieves a 95 percent recycling rate in its restaurants with
the McRecycle(R) program
-- Logistics: McDonald's entire fleet of supply trucks in
the UAE currently run on 100 percent biodiesel, made from
vegetable oil recycled from McDonald's restaurants
-- Communications: For McDonald's restaurant employees in
Spain, environmental training is a core element of
orientation and training
-- Greening the Restaurants: McDonald's USA plans to
build 25 additional LEED-certified restaurants by 2015
through its participation in the LEED Volume Program
-- Greening the Restaurants: The first green restaurant in
Pilar, Argentina, built by Arcos Dorados, McDonald's
development licensee in Latin America, becomes the first new
building in the country to receive LEED Gold for New
Construction certification
-- Greening the Workplace: McDonald's Japan helps nearly
5,500 of its crew members achieve a 15 percent reduction in
their power usage from July through September 2011
"These actions are important," said Ryan Schuchard,
manager of climate and energy, BSR. "The environmental
progress from the U.S. market's energy-saving commitment
alone is meaningful, and it provides good examples of
initiatives that could have a huge impact if scaled
throughout the McDonald's system globally."
For more on Best of Green:
http://www.aboutmcdonalds.com/mcd/sustainability/signature_programs/best_practices.html
About McDonald's McDonald's is the world's
leading global foodservice retailer with more than 33,500
locations serving approximately 68 million customers in 119
countries each day. More than 80 percent of McDonald's
restaurants worldwide are owned and operated by independent
local men and women. To learn more about the company, please
visit www.aboutmcdonalds.com and follow us on Facebook
(http://www.facebook.com/mcdonaldscorp) and Twitter
(http://www.twitter.com/mcdonaldscorp).
Lisa McComb
630-623-3707
lisa.mccomb@us.mcd.com
Steve Mazeika
630-623-3546
stephen.mazeika@us.mcd.com
SOURCE: McDonald's Corporation
mailto:lisa.mccomb@us.mcd.com
mailto:stephen.mazeika@us.mcd.com
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