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A vision for sustainable restaurants

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    Restaurants and the food industry in general
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    are pretty much the most wasteful industry
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    in the world.
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    For every calorie of food that we consume here in Britain today,
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    10 calories are taken to produce it.
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    That's a lot.
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    I want to take something rather humble
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    to discuss.
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    I found this in the farmers' market today,
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    and if anybody wants to take it home and mash it later, you're very welcome to.
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    The humble potato --
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    and I've spent a long time, 25 years, preparing these.
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    And it pretty much goes through
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    eight different forms in its lifetime.
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    First of all, it's planted, and that takes energy.
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    It grows and is nurtured.
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    It's then harvested.
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    It's then distributed,
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    and distribution is a massive issue.
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    It's then sold and bought,
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    and it's then delivered to me.
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    I basically take it, prepare it,
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    and then people consume it -- hopefully they enjoy it.
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    The last stage is basically waste,
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    and this is is pretty much where everybody disregards it.
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    There are different types of waste.
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    There's a waste of time; there's a waste of space; there's a waste of energy;
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    and there's a waste of waste.
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    And every business I've been working on
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    over the past five years,
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    I'm trying to lower each one of these elements.
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    Okay, so you ask what a sustainable restaurant looks like.
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    Basically a restaurant just like any other.
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    This is the restaurant, Acorn House.
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    Front and back.
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    So let me run you through a few ideas.
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    Floor: sustainable, recyclable.
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    Chairs: recycled and recyclable.
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    Tables: Forestry Commission.
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    This is Norwegian Forestry Commission wood.
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    This bench, although it was uncomfortable for my mom --
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    she didn't like sitting on it,
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    so she went and bought these cushions for me from a local jumble sale --
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    reusing, a job that was pretty good.
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    I hate waste, especially walls.
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    If they're not working, put a shelf on it, which I did,
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    and that shows all the customers my products.
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    The whole business is run on sustainable energy.
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    This is powered by wind. All of the lights are daylight bulbs.
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    Paint is all low-volume chemical,
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    which is very important when you're working in the room all the time.
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    I was experimenting with these -- I don't know if you can see it --
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    but there's a work surface there.
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    And that's a plastic polymer.
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    And I was thinking, well I'm trying to think nature, nature, nature.
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    But I thought, no, no, experiment with resins,
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    experiment with polymers.
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    Will they outlive me? They probably might.
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    Right, here's a reconditioned coffee machine.
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    It actually looks better than a brand new one -- so looking good there.
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    Now reusing is vital.
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    And we filter our own water.
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    We put them in bottles, refrigerate them,
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    and then we reuse that bottle again and again and again.
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    Here's a great little example.
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    If you can see this orange tree, it's actually growing in a car tire,
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    which has been turned inside out and sewn up.
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    It's got my compost in it, which is growing an orange tree, which is great.
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    This is the kitchen, which is in the same room.
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    I basically created a menu that allowed people
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    to choose the amount and volume of food
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    that they wanted to consume.
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    Rather than me putting a dish down,
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    they were allowed to help themselves to as much or as little as they wanted.
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    Okay, it's a small kitchen. It's about five square meters.
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    It serves 220 people a day.
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    We generate quite a lot of waste.
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    This is the waste room.
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    You can't get rid of waste.
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    But this story's not about eliminating it, it's about minimizing it.
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    In here, I have produce and boxes
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    that are unavoidable.
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    I put my food waste into this dehydrating, desiccating macerator --
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    turns food into an inner material,
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    which I can store and then compost later.
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    I compost it in this garden.
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    All of the soil you can see there is basically my food,
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    which is generated by the restaurant,
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    and it's growing in these tubs, which I made out of storm-felled trees
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    and wine casks and all kinds of things.
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    Three compost bins --
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    go through about 70 kilos of raw vegetable waste a week --
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    really good, makes fantastic compost.
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    A couple of wormeries in there too.
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    And actually one of the wormeries
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    was a big wormery. I had a lot of worms in it.
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    And I tried taking the dried food waste,
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    putting it to the worms, going, "There you go, dinner."
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    It was like vegetable jerky,
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    and killed all of them.
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    I don't know how many worms [were] in there,
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    but I've got some heavy karma coming, I tell you.
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    (Laughter)
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    What you're seeing here is a water filtration system.
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    This takes the water out of the restaurant,
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    runs it through these stone beds -- this is going to be mint in there --
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    and I sort of water the garden with it.
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    And I ultimately want to recycle that, put it back into the loos,
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    maybe wash hands with it, I don't know.
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    So, water is a very important aspect.
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    I started meditating on that
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    and created a restaurant called Waterhouse.
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    If I could get Waterhouse to be a no-carbon restaurant
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    that is consuming no gas to start with, that would be great.
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    I managed to do it.
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    This restaurant looks a little bit like Acorn House --
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    same chairs, same tables.
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    They're all English and a little bit more sustainable.
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    But this is an electrical restaurant.
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    The whole thing is electric, the restaurant and the kitchen.
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    And it's run on hydroelectricity,
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    so I've gone from air to water.
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    Now it's important to understand
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    that this room
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    is cooled by water, heated by water,
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    filters its own water,
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    and it's powered by water.
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    It literally is Waterhouse.
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    The air handling system inside it --
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    I got rid of air-conditioning
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    because I thought there was too much consumption going on there.
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    This is basically air-handling.
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    I'm taking the temperature of the canal outside,
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    pumping it through the heat exchange mechanism,
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    it's turning through these amazing sails on the roof,
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    and that, in turn, is falling softly onto the people in the restaurant,
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    cooling them, or heating them, as the need may be.
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    And this is an English willow air diffuser,
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    and that's softly moving
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    that air current through the room.
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    Very advanced, no air-conditioning -- I love it.
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    In the canal, which is just outside the restaurant,
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    there is hundreds of meters of coil piping.
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    This takes the temperature of the canal
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    and turns it into this four-degrees of heat exchange.
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    I have no idea how it works, but I paid a lot of money for it.
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    (Laughter)
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    And what's great is one of the chefs who works in that restaurant
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    lives on this boat -- it's off-grid; it generates all its own power.
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    He's growing all his own fruit, and that's fantastic.
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    There's no accident in names of these restaurants.
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    Acorn House is the element of wood; Waterhouse is the element of water;
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    and I'm thinking, well, I'm going to be making
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    five restaurants based
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    on the five Chinese medicine acupuncture specialities.
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    I've got water and wood. I'm just about to do fire.
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    I've got metal and earth to come.
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    So you've got to watch your space for that.
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    Okay. So this is my next project.
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    Five weeks old,
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    it's my baby, and it's hurting real bad.
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    The People's Supermarket.
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    So basically, the restaurants only really hit
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    people who believed in what I was doing anyway.
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    What I needed to do was get food out
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    to a broader spectrum of people.
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    So people -- i.e., perhaps, more working-class --
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    or perhaps people who actually believe in a cooperative.
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    This is a social enterprise,
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    not-for-profit cooperative supermarket.
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    It really is about the social disconnect
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    between food, communities
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    in urban settings
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    and their relationship to rural growers --
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    connecting communities in London to rural growers.
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    Really important.
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    So I'm committing to potatoes; I'm committing to milk;
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    I'm committing to leeks and broccoli -- all very important stuff.
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    I've kept the tiles; I've kept the floors;
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    I've kept the trunking; I've got in some recycled fridges;
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    I've got some recycled tills; I've got some recycled trolleys.
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    I mean, the whole thing is is super-sustainable.
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    In fact, I'm trying and I'm going to make this
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    the most sustainable supermarket in the world.
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    That's zero food waste.
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    And no one's doing that just yet.
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    In fact, Sainsbury's, if you're watching,
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    let's have a go. Try it on.
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    I'm going to get there before you.
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    So nature doesn't create waste
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    doesn't create waste as such.
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    Everything in nature is used up in a closed continuous cycle
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    with waste being the end of the beginning,
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    and that's been something that's been nurturing me for some time,
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    and it's an important statement to understand.
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    If we don't stand up
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    and make a difference
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    and think about sustainable food,
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    think about the sustainable nature of it,
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    then we may fail.
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    But, I wanted to get up and show you
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    that we can do it if we're more responsible.
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    Environmentally conscious businesses are doable.
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    They're here. You can see I've done three so far;
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    I've got a few more to go.
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    The idea is embryonic.
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    I think it's important.
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    I think that if we reduce, reuse, refuse
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    and recycle -- right at the end there --
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    recycling is the last point I want to make;
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    but it's the four R's, rather than the three R's --
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    then I think we're going to be on our way.
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    So these three are not perfect -- they're ideas.
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    I think that there are many problems to come,
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    but with help, I'm sure I'm going to find solutions.
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    And I hope you all take part.
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    Thank you very much. (Applause)
Title:
A vision for sustainable restaurants
Speaker:
Arthur Potts Dawson
Description:

If you've been in a restaurant kitchen, you've seen how much food, water and energy can be wasted there. Chef Arthur Potts-Dawson shares his very personal vision for drastically reducing restaurant, and supermarket, waste -- creating recycling, composting, sustainable engines for good (and good food).

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
08:28
TED edited English subtitles for A vision for sustainable restaurants
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