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McDonald's Honored by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: Conservation and Recycling Efforts Earn 'WasteWise' Award

PRNewswire
WASHINGTON
Oct 20, 2000

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday presented McDonald's USA with its WasteWise Partner of the Year award, in recognition of its ongoing commitment to significant solid waste reduction.

The EPA cited McDonald's industry-leading recycling track record and its continual review and evaluation of packaging materials, with an eye on always trying to find the most efficient materials available.

The award was given at the EPA's 2000 WasteWise Awards and Recognition ceremony in Washington, D.C. on Thursday.

"McDonald's commitment to environmental leadership is a cornerstone of our core value of giving back to the communities in which we do business," said Jack Greenberg, McDonald's Chairman and CEO. "McDonald's will continue to work with the EPA, the Environmental Defense and other environmental experts to keep us on the cutting edge of environmental stewardship."

McDonald's led the way in the Buy Recycled initiative by purchasing more than 300,000 tons of paper products made from recycled materials in 1999 alone. McDonald's is constantly reducing the weight, volume and environmental impact of its packaging materials and exploring new packaging alternatives.

The U.S. EPA cited some examples of McDonald's leadership in this area as follows:

  1. Conserved 3,200 tons of paper and cardboard by eliminating sandwich
     containers, and replacing them with single-layer flexible sandwich
     wraps.

  2. By switching to lighter drink cups, McDonald's eliminated 1,100 tons of
     cardboard materials that would have been used for shipping.

  3. Spent more than $355 million on recycled-content products.  This
     included the purchase of nearly 100,000 tons of paper made from
     recycled office paper waste.

"McDonald's led the way again in 1999 in promoting the "buy recycled" message by purchasing more than $300 million worth of products made from recycled materials," said Elizabeth Cotsworth, Director for the U.S. EPA Office of Solid Waste. "To inspire other organizations to follow their lead, WasteWise featured McDonald's as a panelist in the 1999 WasteWise 'Buy Recycled' national satellite forum. Since they joined WasteWise in 1994, McDonald's has demonstrated every year its commitment to solid waste reduction."

Last December, McDonald's Corporation and the Environmental Defense marked the tenth anniversary of their groundbreaking alliance. Over the past ten years, that partnership has resulted in dozens of major environmental initiatives, including McDonald's move to unbleached paper carry-out bags, replacing polystyrene foam sandwich clamshells with paper wraps and light-weight recycled boxes.

  In the past ten years, McDonald's has:

   -- Eliminated 150,000 tons of McDonald's packaging through redesigning or
      reducing the amount of materials used to make straws, napkins,
      sandwich packaging, cups, French fry containers and other items.

   -- Purchased more than $3 billion in products made from recycled
      materials for use in McDonald's restaurants.

   -- Recycled more than one million tons of corrugated cardboard, the most
      commonly used material for shipping products to McDonald's 12,500
      restaurants, reducing restaurant waste by 30%.

   -- McDonald's also committed to energy conservation efforts by installing
      energy-efficient lights in the restaurants, and testing five
      state-of-the-art energy efficient restaurants in the U.S. that
      achieved a 10-15% reduction in energy use.  McDonald's has an
      overarching goal of reducing energy use by 10% in its restaurants.

McDonald's Corporation is the largest and best-known food service retailer with more than 28,000 restaurants serving more than 43 million people a day in 120 countries.

SOURCE: McDonald's Corporation

Contact: Walt Riker of McDonald's, 630-623-3678