Restaurant Sustainability Practices Checklist

Quarterly sustainability program a restaurant operator runs across FOH and BOH to reduce energy, water, and waste while improving sourcing, products, and the physical plant. Owner-operator or GM owns the rollout; chef, beverage director, and facilities lead support.

6 sections 29 steps Collects data
1

Energy Efficiency

  1. Convert lighting fixtures to LED
    • Replace incandescent and T8 fluorescent fixtures in dining, prep, walk-in coolers, and exterior signage with LED equivalents. Many utilities offer rebates through ENERGY STAR or local programs — check before purchasing. Record the percent of fixtures converted so quarterly reporting can show progress.

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  2. Verify Energy Star ratings on kitchen equipment
    • Pull the model numbers on reach-ins, low-boys, dish machines, ice machines, and the convection oven. Cross-check against the ENERGY STAR product finder. Flag any non-rated equipment for the replacement cycle — refrigeration is usually the highest payback.

  3. Program thermostat schedules for service hours
    • Set the dining-room thermostat to ramp up one hour before doors and step back two hours after close. A common waste pattern is conditioning the dining room overnight to service temperature.

  4. Install occupancy sensors in walk-ins and storerooms
    • Dry storage, walk-in coolers, prep pantries, and the office are low-occupancy spaces where lights routinely stay on through service. Time delay sensors (10-15 minutes) avoid nuisance shutoffs during prep.

  5. Conduct a quarterly energy audit
    • Pull the last 12 months of utility bills and benchmark kWh per cover against the EPA ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager peer data for full-service restaurants. Walk the building during service and after close to identify equipment running unnecessarily.

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  6. Build a prioritized energy upgrade plan
    • Rank the audit findings by simple payback period. Capital-light items (gaskets, strip curtains, hood controls) typically pay back in under a year and should land in the next quarter; major refrigeration or HVAC upgrades go into the annual capex plan.

2

Water Conservation

  1. Install low-flow faucets and pre-rinse spray valves
    • A WaterSense-labeled pre-rinse valve at the dish pit uses 1.28 gpm or less versus 2.2+ gpm on older units — typically the single highest-impact water fix in a full-service kitchen.

  2. Inspect plumbing for leaks at sinks and ice machines
    • Walk the three-bay sink, hand sinks, mop sink, ice machine line, and the post-mix soda lines. A dripping faucet at one drop per second wastes about 3,000 gallons per year.

  3. Log the monthly water meter reading
    • Read the meter on the first business day of the month before the line starts prep. A month-over-month jump of more than 15% with similar covers usually means a leak — investigate within the week.

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  4. Verify dishwasher and ice machine WaterSense ratings
    • Flight-type and door-type dish machines should hit Energy Star water consumption targets (0.95 gal/rack for door-type). Air-cooled ice machines use 25-30 gallons per 100 lbs of ice; water-cooled units use far more and are restricted in many municipalities.

  5. Add aerators to FOH and BOH hand sinks
    • 1.5 gpm aerators on hand sinks and 0.5 gpm on restroom faucets are low-cost and screw on in minutes. Do not aerate the prep sink — chefs need full flow for rinsing produce.

3

Waste Reduction

  1. Set up source-separated recycling stations
    • Position labeled bins for glass, mixed paper, plastic, and metal at the dish pit, bar back, and prep stations. Confirm with the hauler what's accepted — bar glass with foil tops is often rejected as contamination.

  2. Launch a back-of-house compost stream
    • Trim, peel, coffee grounds, and end-of-day spoilage go to compost. Train prep cooks at lineup; mislabeled bins (gloves, plastic wrap, foil) ruin the load. A commercial hauler or municipal organics program is the usual path.

  3. Partner with a local food rescue organization
    • Groups like Food Rescue US, Too Good To Go, or a local food bank will pick up unserved prep that's safely held. The Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Food Donation Act protects donors who give in good faith — confirm cold-chain documentation with the receiving partner.

  4. Track daily food waste at prep and post-service
    • Weigh trim waste during prep and plate-scrape waste post-service. Even a paper log on a clipboard surfaces the top 3 over-prepped items — that data drives par-level adjustments faster than any cost-of-goods report.

  5. Move menus and receipts to digital formats
    • QR-code menus and emailed receipts through Toast, Square, or Resy reduce paper consumption substantially. Keep a printed allergen-friendly menu at the host stand for guests who request one.

4

Sustainable Sourcing

  1. Source produce from farms within 150 miles
    • Build a seasonal produce list with the chef and identify two or three regional growers or a local food hub (e.g., FreshPoint Local, Common Market). Lock in a weekly drop schedule that matches the menu's seasonal change cadence.

  2. Verify seafood against Seafood Watch ratings
    • Run every seafood SKU on the menu through Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch and check for MSC (wild-caught) or ASC (farmed) certification on the invoice. Imported shrimp, Atlantic salmon, and bluefin tuna are common Avoid-rated items in restaurant menus.

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  3. Contact suppliers for verified seafood alternatives
    • Ask the rep at Sysco, US Foods, or a specialty seafood distributor for MSC- or ASC-certified equivalents. Domestic farmed catfish, U.S. Atlantic mackerel, and Alaskan pollock are common drop-in substitutes. Update the menu and 86 the prior item.

  4. Add plant-forward entrees to the core menu
    • At least two entree-priced vegetarian or vegan dishes signal the kitchen takes plant cuisine seriously. Train servers to lead with them when a guest mentions dietary preference — a vague "we can do a vegetable plate" loses the cover.

  5. Audit top suppliers for sustainability certifications
    • Pull the top 10 vendors by spend from R365 or QuickBooks. Ask each rep for certifications — USDA Organic, Animal Welfare Approved, Certified Humane, Fair Trade. Document responses; vendors that don't respond within 30 days move down the bidding list.

5

Eco-Friendly Products

  1. Switch to-go containers to BPI-certified compostable
    • Look for BPI (Biodegradable Products Institute) certification, not vague "eco" labels. Confirm the local compost hauler accepts the product — many municipal facilities reject bagasse or PLA-lined containers.

  2. Eliminate single-use plastic straws and cutlery
    • Use paper or compostable straws on request only. For dine-in, transition to reusable stainless or porcelain. For to-go, switch to wood or PLA cutlery. Several states (CA, NJ, WA, OR) already restrict polystyrene service ware — confirm local ordinances.

  3. Replace cleaning chemicals with Green Seal certified
    • Degreaser, all-purpose, glass cleaner, and floor cleaner all have Green Seal or EcoLogo certified equivalents. Sanitizer concentration (quat or chlorine ppm) must still meet local health code — confirm the new product hits 200-400 ppm quat or 50-100 ppm chlorine on the three-bay sink.

6

Green Building and Remodeling

  1. Specify FSC-certified wood and low-VOC finishes
    • For any millwork, tabletops, or banquettes in the next remodel, write FSC certification and low-VOC paints/sealants into the spec. The Greenguard Gold standard covers most finish materials. Closing the dining room for paint with high-VOC product is a common cause of avoidable guest complaints when reopening.

  2. Maximize daylighting in the dining room
    • Replace heavy window treatments with light-diffusing solar shades for lunch service. A dimming control on the dining-room circuit lets the room shift from bright daylight at lunch to ambient warm light at dinner without leaving fixtures at full power all day.

  3. Insulate walk-in coolers and hot-water lines
    • Replace torn walk-in gaskets, hang strip curtains at the door, and wrap hot-water lines from the water heater to the dish machine. These small fixes typically pay back in under six months and reduce refrigeration and water-heating load measurably.

  4. Upgrade to ENERGY STAR windows and doors
    • For storefront glass, specify Low-E coating with a U-factor and SHGC matched to your climate zone (per ENERGY STAR). Vestibules at the front door cut HVAC load substantially in cold-climate operations.

  5. Plant native, drought-tolerant landscaping
    • For patios, sidewalks, and parking strips, use species from the regional native plant guide. Drip irrigation on a timer beats spray heads on a hose bibb. Pollinator-friendly plantings also support a story the FOH can tell guests.

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Sections 6
Steps 29
Category Restaurant
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