Whither Bluto Blutarsky?


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines  

Ah, college, where the next party is but a dorm room away, and sustenance simply involves stumbling toward the nearest dining hall. But all is not well on campus, as a new Ohio University study on food waste threatens to harsh everyone’s buzz.

Audits conducted during dinner service over the course of four Mondays at Ohio University’s Jefferson Dining Hall measured the amount of edible food students dispose. The audits, which were overseen by the school’s Office of Sustainability, omitted kitchen waste, non-edible food waste (banana peels, bones, apple cores, etc.) and trash.

Over the four days, students averaged 5.40 ounces of food waste per person, a number the school calls “unusually high” when compared with other schools (a similar study found Harvard students averaged 3.3 ounces of food waste). The waste generated on the first day of the audit was enough to feed 330 people, school officials added.

Students polled after results of the audit were published seemed eager to reduce the amount of waste. Cutting the number of impromptu zit impressions alone will conserve several hundred pounds of mashed potatoes each month.

Source: Ohio University Office of Sustainability




Acceptable Use Policy
blog comments powered by Disqus

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2009 Penton Media Inc.


Most Recent Story

Thermostat Recycling

June 20, 2007

The Thermostat Recycling Corp., Rossyln, Va., and the Product Stewardship Institute (PSI) Inc., Boston, have announced the creation of a nationwide...

-->

Current Issue

Issue Cover View Issue
Subscribe
Subscribe to
Digital Edition

In this issue, we look at the coping strategies adopted by waste firms operating in the slumping economy. Also this month, tips on maintaining truck hydraulic systems and a look at NSWMA's new campaign to educate the public about the waste industry's environmental efforts.


ATE logo
Become an Expert
A panel of professionals answers your questions on a variety of topics.

Steve GoodierTopic: Lubricants

Steve Goodier
Director of Technology



Newsletters

Waste Age Wire

Waste Age Online Show Daily

Subscribe to Our Newsletters

Back to Top

Browse Back Issues

Browse Back Issues