Polytechnique Montréal removes beef from cafeteria menus to cut emissions
MONTREAL — A Montreal engineering school says it has removed beef from its cafeterias to reduce its carbon footprint.
Polytechnique Montréal started removing beef options in September from its six food stalls that serve about 2,500 meals a day to 10,000 students.
Patrick Cigana, director of Polytechnique’s office of sustainable development, said beef accounted for more than half of the cafeterias’ greenhouse gas emissions.
He cited data from a University of Oxford research platform showing that beef produces about 10 times the carbon emissions of chicken. Cigana said the school expects cafeteria-related emissions to drop this year, though full data is not yet available.


