Food Waste Costs
more than Money
— Certification
turns Waste
into Impact
Food Waste
Costs more
than Money—
Certification
turns Waste
into Impact
UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (EPA)
EPA Food Recovery Challenge – Certified Food Waste Reduction & Composting
EPA Food Recovery Challenge – Certified Food Waste Reduction & Composting
The EPA Food Recovery Challenge recognizes hotels that follow a structured hierarchy to reduce food waste—from source reduction to donation and composting. It supports legal compliance, enhances brand sustainability narratives, and turns food loss into a measurable, guest-facing advantage.
Importance:
Globally, food waste accounts for over one-third of all produced food. In hospitality, waste isn’t just bad economics—it’s bad optics. The EPA Food Recovery Challenge helps hotels systematize reduction, repurpose surplus through donations, and divert food scraps from landfills via composting. It aligns food operations with environmental values guests expect.
Benefits:
This certification improves ESG performance, reduces hauling fees, supports tax write-offs through food donation, and builds partnerships with local nonprofits. It also reinforces brand sustainability, strengthens RFP responses, and aligns with LEED or Green Key metrics. Operations benefit from lower spoilage and more efficient purchasing cycles.
Risks of Non-Compliance:
Without a food waste program, hotels face higher disposal costs, negative environmental impact scores, and reputational damage among eco-conscious guests or investors. Increasingly, municipalities may mandate composting or impose fines for landfill overuse.
To recognize and certify hospitality businesses that demonstrate measurable improvements in food waste reduction, recovery, and environmentally responsible disposal through an audited, tiered framework.
Food waste audits, donation partnerships, composting programs, data tracking via Re-TRAC Connect, reduction target setting, staff training, public reporting of food recovery metrics.
EPA Food Recovery Hierarchy, U.S. Food Donation Improvement Act, USDA Waste Reduction Goals, GHG Protocol Scope 3 emissions accounting for waste reduction.
Hotel Job Titles Affected:
Executive Chef, F&B Director, Purchasing Manager, Stewarding Team, Sustainability Manager, Engineering (for composting infrastructure).
Why These Roles Are Involved:
They manage procurement, track food usage, oversee waste flow, and liaise with compost or donation partners. Their involvement is essential to implement and sustain compliant, measurable waste reduction strategies.
Training Requirements:
Staff must be trained on food sorting, portion control, donation safety protocols, and compost bin procedures. Managers must input data to EPA tracking systems quarterly or per audit cycle.
Hotels that participate in the Food Recovery Challenge typically lower food costs by up to 10%, reduce trash volume, and simplify inventory planning. Programs often lead to better kitchen workflow, reduced overtime in waste handling, and new community partnerships.
Cross-functional impacts include engineering (waste system layout), HR (training), and marketing (guest messaging).
Hotels without food waste programs may face scrutiny in ESG audits or lose business from environmentally conscious clients. As landfill costs and regulations increase, non-participants may incur unexpected fines or reputational penalties.
Example:
A conference hotel failed to meet a Fortune 100 client’s sustainability requirement due to lack of documented food waste mitigation. The contract—worth \$1.8M—was awarded to a competitor with active EPA Food Recovery participation.
Guests are increasingly sensitive to sustainability claims. Certification offers quantifiable proof of action. Clear bin signage, QR codes linking to food waste data, or “waste diverted this month” dashboards on buffets demonstrate values in action—driving loyalty and differentiation.
Participation can also enhance OTA rankings, corporate RFP positioning, and travel program eligibility.
Certified programs train staff in food inventory control, safe donation prep, compostable waste identification, and guest communication on waste policies. This increases operational confidence and creates internal champions for sustainability.
Certified teams become proud stewards of resource conservation—enhancing morale and reducing turnover.
The EPA Food Recovery Challenge certifies hotels that actively reduce, donate, and compost food waste. It aligns F&B operations with sustainability goals, saves money, and enhances guest and investor trust—fully tracked and verifiable via blockchain with StayCertified™.