- The Washington Times - Thursday, December 12, 2019

The anti-meat messaging at the U.N. Climate Change Conference apparently hasn’t deterred attendees from grabbing a bite at one of the world’s most popular burger joints.

Climate Depot’s Marc Morano caught on video long lines at the Madrid climate confab onsite Burger King, even though the outlet wasn’t serving the Impossible Burger, the chain’s recently unveiled vegan offering.

“Burger King only offered real cow meat at the summit location,” Mr. Morano said in his Thursday report. “No fake meat burger available is even more ironic, given that the U.N. just gave its ’Planetary Heath’ award to the company responsible for Burger King’s fake meat ’Impossible Meat’ burgers on December 10.”

Mr. Morano, named in Nature article last year as the media’s top “climate contrarian,” also tracked down Harrison Ford, who said in a 2010 interview that he often flew up the coast just to grab a cheeseburger, at the Madrid summit.

Asked whether he still fires up his plane when he gets a hankering for a burger, Mr. Ford replied, “I’m a vegetarian now, thank you.”

The U.N. Environment Programme warned in November 2018 that “meat production is one of the most destructive ways in which we leave our footprint on the planet,” and encouraged consumers to eat less meat.

The annual climate-change convention, known as COP25, hosts delegations from across the world to “take the next crucial steps in the U.N. climate change process” following the 2015 Paris Agreement.

• Valerie Richardson can be reached at vrichardson@washingtontimes.com.

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