PPC and The Last Plastic Straw Recognize Mario Batali for Eliminating Plastic Straws

Plastic Pollution Coalition and The Last Plastic Straw awarded Chef Mario Batali with a certificate of business and community leadership on Oct. 24 in NYC, USA, for eliminating plastic straws in his 20 restaurants and being part of the global solution to plastic pollution. 

The event was a fundraiser for PPC and The Last Plastic Straw (a project of PPC) and featured food and cocktails by Mario Batali and a musical performance by Steve Earle. 

“Single-use plastic is an idea whose time has come and gone,” said Batali at the event. “No more plastic straws in my 20 restaurants.”

Batali & Bastianich Hospitality Group began offering only paper drinking straws upon request in their restaurants starting in July. The move came after a longtime partnership between PPC, Mario Batali, and Elizabeth Meltz, Director of Environmental Health for B&BHG. According to Meltz the 20 restaurants will remove about a quarter of a million straws and stirrers from the waste stream in one year.

Jackie Nuñez, founder of The Last Plastic Straw, thanked Batali for changing industry standards for the better. “Thank you for stepping up to be a solution to plastic pollution instead of a source. You are leading by example, and showing other businesses that it can be done. Thank you for saving the planet one sip at a time!”

Photos by Lynda Churilla. 

Thank you to Mario Batali and Steve Earle, and to host committee members Jackson Browne, Julia Cohen, Michelle Esrick, Jon Kilik, Lisa Henkoff, Marion Hunt, Bill Jackson, Judy & Jim O’Brien, Izhar Patkin, Lois Robbins, Susan & David Rockefeller, Patti Smith, Jann Wenner, Allison Williams, Betsy & Ed Zimmerman. Thank you to S’well Bottle for partnering with PPC and to all the guests of the event who make the work of PPC possible.  

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The 25 restaurants will remove about a quarter of a million straws and stirrers from the waste stream in one year.

Batali & Bastianich Hospitality Group has announced a huge win for the environment: their 25 restaurants will offer paper drinking straws upon request starting in July. The move came after a longtime partnership between Plastic Pollution Coalition and Mario Batali, a PPC notable member, and Elizabeth Meltz, Director of Environmental Health for B&BHG.

B&BHG’s former Las Vegas Culinary Director, Jason Neve, was the first to take notice of a strawfree campaign to reduce plastic waste in 2013. Astounded by the sheer volume of waste that plastic straws create, he asked if there was something our restaurants could do to help reduce the amount of plastic that enters the waste stream. “Why kill a sea turtle, if you don’t have to?” asks Neve, plainly.

Elizabeth Meltz worked with Dianna Cohen, co-founder and CEO of PPC, to think through how to implement Jason’s idea. “I did a quick audit and discovered that our restaurant group alone could remove a quarter of a million straws and stirrers from the waste stream in one year,” says Meltz. Further research revealed that every day 500 million straws are used in America alone. “So if we institute a ‘straws upon request’ policy we could take out a small chunk from that total.”

I love this initiative for so many reasons. It reduces plastic in our waste stream without compromising the customer experience. If you want a straw, you can still get one!

— Mario Batali

To that end, Meltz removed plastic straws from the restaurants in late 2013 and replaced them with corn-based compostable straws served only upon request. While the initiative was a step in the right direction, bioplastics can only be broken down in certain facilities, and they also look like plastic which made it difficult to convey its environmental impact. Today, B&BHG has partnered with Aardvark Paper Drinking Straws to offer colorful paper straws which break down easily.

“I love this initiative for so many reasons,” says Mario Batali: “it reduces plastic in our waste stream without compromising the customer experience. If you want a straw, you can still get one!”

The implementation of paper straws is another step in B&BHG’s initiatives that have led the restaurants to become green certified™. Other efforts include composting, a no bottled water policy, sustainable purchasing practices and more. “While other restaurants may stop at the required number of steps to attain this goal, we thought outside the box on this one,” says Meltz. “You don’t get bonus points for eliminating straws, but our team loves the challenge of being one step ahead and doing more than the minimum.”

Mario Batali and Joe Bastianich are the distinctive forces behind B&B Hospitality Group: an eclectic group of critically acclaimed restaurants in New York, Las Vegas, California, and Singapore. 

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