*By Carlo Versano* Chipotle Mexican Grill is launching an incubator for food start-ups that are developing technology to solve major issues of sustainability in farming, agriculture, and waste. The Chipotle Aluminaries Project will select eight ventures for a seven-month accelerator program under the direction of the company's non-profit arm, director of sustainability Caitlin Leibert said Friday in an interview on Cheddar. Non-profits and for-profits are both welcome to apply come September, and the selection committee will choose organizations that excel in alternative farming, new agricultural tech, waste solutions, and plant-based proteins. Impact and scale are key, Leibert said. "We're not looking for micro," she said. "We're looking for macro." The program will include a week-long boot camp, where industry leaders will mentor participants who "leave that week with a plan to scale," Leibert added. The Aluminaries Project, which begins accepting applications Sept. 12, is part of Chipotle's new plan to bring the chain back from a string of health issues and marketing flops, going back to the 2015 E.coli outbreak that devastated the company. CEO Brian Niccol, who was poached from Taco Bell and took over the company in March has attempted to breathe fresh air into Chipotle's famously restrained menu. He successfully tweaked the recipe of the heavily marketed Queso dip after customers called it ['expired Velveeta'] (https://www.businessinsider.com/chipotle-queso-driving-sales-2018-7), launched a buzzy guacamole promotion, and is now experimenting with adding bacon and nachos to some markets. While the stock is up a staggering 80 percent this year, Chipotle is not out of the woods yet. Earlier this month it was dinged by reports that hundreds of customers were sickened after eating at one of the chain's Ohio locations. Chipotle said last week that it will retrain its entire staff at all 2,500 locations on food-handling rules. For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/chipotle-launches-aluminaries-project).

Share:
More In Business
US businesses that rely on Chinese imports express relief and anxiety
American businesses that rely on Chinese goods are reacting with muted relief after the U.S. and China agreed to pause their exorbitant tariffs on each other’s products for 90 days. Many companies delayed or canceled orders after President Donald Trump last month put a 145% tariff on items made in China. Importers still face relatively high tariffs, however, as well as uncertainty over what will happen in the coming weeks and months. The temporary truce was announced as retailers and their suppliers are looking to finalize their plans and orders for the holiday shopping season. They’re concerned a mad scramble to get goods onto ships will lead to bottlenecks and increased shipping costs.
Load More