Washington, D.C. – The Hotel Kitchen program, a partnership between World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and the American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA), marks five-years of fighting food waste this year. The program works with the hospitality industry using innovative strategies to engage staff, partners and guests in cutting waste from hotel kitchens.

By preventing food waste from occurring at their properties, donating excess food that is still safe for people to eat and diverting the rest away from landfills, hotels participating in the Hotel Kitchen program saw reductions of up to 38 percent of food waste in just 12 weeks. Food waste occurs while 41 million Americans, including 13 million children, are food insecure, and it poses one of the biggest environmental threats to the planet.

“Reducing food waste not only decreases the industry’s environmental footprint and helps fight world hunger, but directly impacts our hotels’ bottom line, engages staff and strengthens relationships with our customers,” said Chip Rogers, President and CEO of AHLA. “Over the years, hotels have made impressive progress in lowering our carbon emissions; sourcing responsibly; and reducing food, energy and water waste. Our members’ work with Hotel Kitchen is just one example of the many sustainability efforts taking place across the hospitality industry.”

“When we started the Hotel Kitchen program five years ago, we knew the hospitality and tourism industry was ideally situated to make a major impact in the fight against food waste,” said Pete Pearson, Senior Director of Food Loss and Waste at World Wildlife Fund. “By engaging every level of the hospitality industry, from hotel owners to guests, we can re-establish food cultures that contemplate the many sacrifices we make to grow and deliver food including biodiversity loss, land use, water and energy. We can honor this sacrifice by reducing waste.”

Hotel Kitchen has provided hoteliers with numerous resources, including ways to communicate food waste to guests; case studies from properties who have reduced food waste through the program; and a toolkit that reports on key findings, best practices and next steps to tackle food waste. In 2021, Greenview, WWF and a cohort of the largest hotel brands developed methodologies for hotel waste measurement, and brand and corporate strategies addressing food waste across the hospitality and food service sector continue to be guided by Hotel Kitchen.

By joining the fight against food waste, America’s hotels are reducing their environmental footprint. In addition to major reductions in water usage and energy across the sector, AHLA and its members have made significant commitments to reduce waste and source responsibly through innovative programs and partnerships like Hotel Kitchen. Last week, to further strengthen its sustainability efforts, AHLA announced a major partnership with the Sustainable Hospitality Alliance, where the organizations will work to amplify, collaborate and support one another's programs and solutions.

About World Wildlife Fund (WWF)

WWF is one of the world’s leading conservation organizations, working in 100 countries for over half a century. With the support of almost 5 million members worldwide, WWF is dedicated to delivering science-based solutions to preserve the diversity and abundance of life on Earth, halt the degradation of the environment and combat climate change. Visit www.worldwildlife.org to learn more and follow our news conversations on Twitter @WWFNews.

About the American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA)

The American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA) is the sole national association representing all segments of the U.S. lodging industry. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., AHLA focuses on strategic advocacy, communications support and workforce development programs to move the industry forward. Learn more at www.ahla.com.