Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Burger King addresses elephant in the room, and it's a cow

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2020 08:18 PM
  • Burger King addresses elephant in the room, and it's a cow

Burger King is staging an intervention with its cows.

The chain has rebalanced the diet of some of the cows by adding lemon grass in a bid to limit bovines contributions to climate change. By tweaking their diet, Burger King said Tuesday that it believes it can reduce a cows' daily methane emissions by about 33%.

Cows emit methane as a by-product of their digestion, and that has become a potential public relations hurdle for major burger chains.

Greenhouse gas emissions from the agriculture sector made up 9.9% of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2018, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Of that amount, methane emissions from livestock (called enteric fermentation) comprised more than a quarter of the emissions from the agriculture sector.

With an over-the-top social media campaig n that teeters between vulgarity and science (sprinkled with more vulgarity), Burger King is banking on the heightened awareness of climate change and its responsibility to limit its own role.

According to a recent poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, about two out of three Americans say corporations have a responsibility to combat climate change. The gravitational pull of climate change is increasingly finding its way onto national political stage.

Potential customers are also cutting down on the amount of meat they consume, citing both environmental and dietary concerns. Burger King and rival McDonald's have added meat alternatives to their menus.

Two years ago McDonald's said it was taking steps to cut the greenhouse gases it emits. It tweaked the manner in which the beef in its Big Macs and Quarter Pounders was produced. The company said at the time that it expected the changes to prevent 150 million metric tons (165 million tons) of greenhouse gas emissions from being released into the atmosphere by 2030.

Burger King worked with scientists at the Autonomous University at the State of Mexico and at the University of California, Davis to test and develop its formula of adding 100 grams of lemongrass leaves to the cows’ daily diets. Preliminary tests indicate that the lemongrass leaves help the cows release less methane as they digest their food.

On Tuesday, Burger King introduced its Reduced Methane Emissions Beef Whopper, made with beef sourced from cows that emit reduced methane, in select restaurants in Miami, New York, Austin, Portland and Los Angeles, while supplies last.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

This Lucknow Firm Wants To Deliver Your Food... Via Drones. Watch Video

This Lucknow Firm Wants To Deliver Your Food... Via Drones. Watch Video
"By Using Drones, We Want To Reduce The Food Delivery Time To 1/3rd Of The Current Time, Which Is 45 Minutes."

This Lucknow Firm Wants To Deliver Your Food... Via Drones. Watch Video

Canadian Appmaker Brings Ride-Hailing Service To Rwanda's Motorcycle Taxis

Canadian Appmaker Brings Ride-Hailing Service To Rwanda's Motorcycle Taxis
In Rwanda, Canadian expat Barrett Nash says you don't need a morning coffee if you take a taxi to work. That's because most taxis are motorcycles and riding on one gives you enough adrenaline to wake right up.

Canadian Appmaker Brings Ride-Hailing Service To Rwanda's Motorcycle Taxis

PICS: US Mcdonald's Staff Shares Gross Photos Of Ice Cream Machine, Gets Fired

PICS: US Mcdonald's Staff Shares Gross Photos Of Ice Cream Machine, Gets Fired
The Twitter user, who goes by the handle @phuckyounick, shared a number of behind-the-scene pictures from the food joint’s kitchen

PICS: US Mcdonald's Staff Shares Gross Photos Of Ice Cream Machine, Gets Fired

Sister Nivedita's UK Home To Be Honoured With Special Plaque

Sister Nivedita's UK Home To Be Honoured With Special Plaque
Sister Nivedita's family home in London, where she lived before moving to India in 1898 to set up a girls' school and help the poor, is to be commemorated with a special plaque on her 150th birth anniversary.

Sister Nivedita's UK Home To Be Honoured With Special Plaque

WATCH: This 'Smart Sticker' By Indian Researcher Detects, Prevents Sexual Assault In Real Time

WATCH: This 'Smart Sticker' By Indian Researcher Detects, Prevents Sexual Assault In Real Time
In the name of safety, many times women have been told to stop working, or asked to be indoors, and I think instead of asking them to be indoors, we should have more safety for them

WATCH: This 'Smart Sticker' By Indian Researcher Detects, Prevents Sexual Assault In Real Time

WATCH: 18-year-old Girl Live-Streams Dying Sister's Car Crash On Instagram

WATCH: 18-year-old Girl Live-Streams Dying Sister's Car Crash On Instagram
An 18-year-old teenager from California live-streamed her sister’s death in a terrifying car crash on Instagram.

WATCH: 18-year-old Girl Live-Streams Dying Sister's Car Crash On Instagram