A Tire Company's Eco-Friendly Restaurant Badge Just Died — And Honestly, Good Riddance
The Michelin Green Star, launched in 2020 and awarded to roughly 500 restaurants across the globe, was officially discontinued in May 2026 — just six years after its debut. The certification collapsed under the weight of its own structural flaws: self-reported sustainability assessments with no independent verification, sustainability reports passed between restaurants with only cosmetic edits, and the fundamental impossibility of tasting a carbon footprint during a dinner service. Michelin announced a replacement initiative called Mindful Voices — an editorial storytelling project designed to spotlight individuals "proposing new methods" in gastronomy, hospitality, and wine — though whether this constitutes genuine evolution or a more sophisticated form of greenwashing remains the central industry debate. This episode exposes deep systemic contradictions in ESG certification across the food industry at a moment when the sector accounts for roughly one-third of global greenhouse gas emissions yet lacks credible, independent audit infrastructure. The era of a tire manufacturer adjudicating restaurant environmental ethics has ended, and the urgent question now is who — if anyone — has the legitimacy and the rigor to establish what comes next.