Maharishi U Mgmt Students Study Campus Sustainability Benefits

Students in a "Managing for Sustainability" course at Maharishi University of Management (IA) will perform sustainability inventories and cost/benefit analyses in campus system areas like waste, lighting, heating/air conditioning, composting and recycling. Based on their findings, the students will make recommendations to the university on which sustainability initiatives to tackle, and which ones might not be worth it. The students will start with small things that can make a difference like the university's recent switch to single-stream recycling.

New CUNY Community College Slated for 2012; First in 43 Years

With plans for degree programs including energy services management, environmental science and urban studies, a new community college has been approved by the City University of New York Board of Trustees. The system's first new community college in 43 years, the institution will open in Manhattan in the fall of 2012 with an initial 500 students.

Ohio Wesleyan U Hires First Sustainability Coordinator

Ohio Wesleyan University has named Sean Kinghorn as its first energy conservation and sustainability coordinator. With more than 15 years of experience in sustainability planning, sustainable development, renewable energy, green building consulting and environmental planning, Kinghorn will help the campus community reduce its energy consumption and carbon footprint and seek cost savings. The two-year position is funded through a State of Ohio Energy and Conservation Block Grant awarded to the university in June 2010. This grant also funded a campus-wide energy audit, the results of which will be available this spring.

Rockingham CC Installs Solar Array

Rockingham Community College (VA) students enrolled in the electronics program have installed 40 solar panels that are capable of producing 5.2 kilowatts of electricity. This latest solar addition compliments the 3.2-megawatt array installed by students in 2009. The power generated by the entire system is plugged directly into the campus power system.

Roosevelt U Greens Schaumburg Campus Grounds

This spring, Roosevelt University (IL) will redesign the landscape of its Schaumburg campus. The university’s Green Campus Environmental Sustainability Initiative plans to convert 70 percent of the campus turf into native grasses and plants. They are also planning to resurface parking areas with a more permeable pavement.

Seattle Central College Plans Energy Systems Upgrade

Seattle Central College (WA) has entered into a partnership with Ameresco Quantum for campus energy-efficiency upgrades requiring no capital investment. A grant from Washington's Department of Commerce will fund $2 million of the $4.7 million project. The initiative will replace HVAC equipment, upgrade lighting and install energy management systems throughout buildings on campus. The improvements are expected to generate $200,000 in energy, water and maintenance savings each year, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 650 tons annually.

St. Lawrence U Implements Building Energy Dashboard

St. Lawrence University (NY) has partnered with Lucid Design Group to develop a building energy dashboard to allow the public to view real-time electricity usage in any of its 72 buildings. The data is available to anyone with Internet access, and it is user-friendly by making electricity-saving suggestions and allowing users to view the data in a variety of charts and graphs. The intent is to raise awareness about energy use and to encourage people to make decisions based on energy conservation.

U British Columbia Receives $11.2 Mil for Clean Energy Project

The University of British Columbia received $11.2 million in government funding to help finance its clean energy demonstration project. The project aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 4,500 tons a year, roughly the equivalent of removing 1,100 cars from the road. It will accomplish this with a biomass-fueled heat and power generation system.

U Calgary Expands Recycling Efforts

The University of Calgary (AB) has announced the addition of hundreds of new recycling bins across campus. The multi-phase upgrade to the university's waste and recycling infrastructure kicked off 800 new blue bins for recycling paper/cardboard and beverage containers. The bins will include new signage that clearly indicates what can or cannot go inside.

U California San Diego Sustainability Center Earns LEED Gold

The University of California, San Diego has earned its fifth LEED-certified building project with the recent LEED Gold certification of its new Sustainability Center. Many of the sustainable features are student ideas, including reclaimed wood, metal building materials and a recycled cardboard table that looks like a hardwood table. The building's ceiling lights are directly powered by solar panels. In related news, the university has unveiled new environmentally friendly campus apartments for transfer students starting in fall 2011. Aligned to capitalize on wind and solar rays, the building's plaster, paving, carpet and metal studs are made with recycled materials and the residents will bathe with solar-heated water.

U Chicago Debuts Recycling Directory

In an effort to assist the campus community to recycle as many everyday items as possible, the University of Chicago (IL) has launched a new Recycling Directory that compiles campus and other local recycling resources. The items included range from cosmetics and eyeglasses to appliances and batteries. Each item in the directory contains a brief description about the importance of recycling the item, followed by options for recycling on campus (if available) as well as in the City of Chicago.

U Iowa Partners with City Dump for Methane Gas Project

The University of Iowa plans to buy methane gas from Iowa City’s landfill and pipe it over to heat facilities on its campus. The university will pay the city for this service, and Iowa City plans to spend $2 million for the gas conditioning and compression equipment, while the university will spend $500,000 updating engines to burn the landfill gas. The project is not touted as less expensive, but as an opportunity to operate facilities on fuel that would otherwise be garbage.

U Kentucky Debuts Sustainability Studies Degree

The University of Kentucky is set to offer an environmental and sustainability studies degree. The undergraduate major will incorporate a broad range of subjects including humanities, natural sciences, writing, communications and environmental ethics. The program will begin in fall 2011.

U Maryland Exceeds Recycling Goals

With a recycling rate of 63 percent, the University of Maryland has surpassed its 2010 recycling goal. The university's single-stream recycling efforts, Can the Can program and the addition of grass and leaves composting contributed to a rate of 3 percent higher than its Climate Action Plan called for. This waste diversion rate is up from 17 percent in 2003.

U Maryland Installs Electric Car Charging Stations

The University of Maryland’s Department of Transportation Services has installed five electric car charging stations, with five more planned on the university’s campus. Each station can recharge two cars simultaneously for four to eight hours. The university hopes that the stations will encourage people to move toward electric cars. The electric charging stations cost $31,500 total.

U North Carolina Wilmington Energy Renovations to Save $8.9 Mil

The University of North Carolina Wilmington has implemented a host of energy-efficient upgrades that are expected to save the university $8.9 million. The upgrades include energy-efficient boilers, solar tubes and day lighting. The estimated savings are expected to occur during the 20-year contract with Trane Comfort Solutions. According to the contract, the university can use future energy savings to finance the initial capital investment.

Utah State U Students Approve Sustainability Fee

Students at Utah State University have approved a student-proposed $3 per-semester fee that will create an office of sustainability on its Logan campus and fund student projects geared toward conserving resources. The Blue Goes Green fee was modeled on a small fee approved by University of Utah students two years ago and has since funded a variety of projects including the resurrection of an old fruit orchard and research into low-water irrigation for campus landscaping.

U Washington Seattle Practices Certified Salmon-Safe

The University of Washington’s Seattle campus has been certified salmon-safe by the Network for Business Innovation and Sustainability. The certification is the first of its kind for an organization of the university’s size. The certification is an in-depth process that inspects the grounds, water usage and energy sources to ensure that the university’s practices do not harm salmon habitat.

Vanderbilt U Creates $75K Green Fund

After receiving student surveys and letters of support, Vanderbilt University (TN) has established a Green Fund with $75,000 in administration funds. The fund will be available to finance student projects that aim to reduce the university’s energy consumption and/or carbon emissions. It will serve a three-year trial period in which it will be non-revolving, meaning that savings from the projects funded will not be directed back into the fund. After three years, the university will determine whether the fund was successful enough to finance a revolving fund. Projects that incentivize a switch to sustainable energy during peak hours will be especially competitive, according to fund managers.

American U Sharjah Students Raise Funds for Community Food Aid

American University of Sharjah (United Arab Emirates) students held a campus-wide fundraising drive to generate support for the "Feed the Needy" campaign, launched by the university's Community Services Division. The students' efforts resulted in a truck load of food items that were distributed to 470 families in the community. In related news, student volunteers at the university were honored with the Sharjah Voluntary Award 2010 in the educational institutions category of the Eighth Local and Fourth Arab Voluntary Awards in December 2010. The university's Community Services Division was recognized for its exemplary volunteer work in the social sector.

City of Westminster College Implements Sustainable Bldg Features

The City of Westminster College's (UK) Paddington campus has instituted numerous green features to its campus facilities including green roofs, rainwater harvesting, grey water recycling and solar shades.

Earth Education International Releases Sustainability Inventory

Earth Education International (Costa Rica) has released its first Sustainability Assessment Inventory, detailing its sustainability efforts to date and the social, economic and/or environmental benefits of each. Sustainability highlights for the interdisciplinary study abroad organization include a pedestrian-friendly program design with locally based activities, field sites and volunteer work; the support of environmentally friendly lodging and food vendors; tree planting to offset the carbon emissions of participant travel; and the use of natural ventilation and renewable energy whenever possible in its office buildings.

EARTH U Receives $200K for Student Scholarships

Panasonic Corporation of North America has awarded $200,000 to EARTH University (Costa Rica) to provide full, four-year scholarships for three students from the U.S., Mexico and Brazil. EARTH University's educational model emphasizes scientific and technical innovation, values, ethics, entrepreneurship and environmental and social commitment.

Gambia Technical Training Inst Partners for Solar Energy Training

Power Up Gambia, an organization that works to provide reliable electricity and water in Gambia through solar energy, has reported a partnership with Gambia Technical Training Institute, one of the largest skills training centers in the country. The organization will work with the institute's Department of Electrical Engineering in an effort to help Gambian companies in the solar field by supporting the development of skilled and well-trained energy technicians who have a strong and common knowledge base in electricity and renewable energy.

Ghana Plans for Renewable Energy University

Ghana's Brong Ahafo region has broken ground for the public University of Renewable Energy, the first of its kind in the region. The university will offer electric, petro-chemical and mechanical engineering programs with courses in energy and natural resources. A national task force will oversee the initiation of this new university.

HEFCE Embarks on Higher Ed Carbon Measurement Project

The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) has recently commissioned a project to measure scope 3 carbon emissions at a higher education institutional level. The project will work to establish a sector baseline of emissions from procurement, produce definitions for measuring scope 3 carbon emissions and provide guidance to higher education institutions to help with the associated data collection. Set for an August 2011 completion, project teams with representatives from the Association of University Directors of Estates (AUDE), the Association of Heads of University Administration (AHUA), the Environmental Association for Universities and Colleges (EAUC) and the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) will engage with a wide range of institutions, sector bodies and stakeholders to collect data in areas of procurement, water, waste, commuting and business travel.

India and U.S. Institutions Partner for Food Security Efforts

A consortium of Indian and U.S. institutions and agribusinesses have announced a $9.6 million project to boost agricultural production and food security in northern India. Launched by India and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) under "Feed the Future," the new Agricultural Innovation Partnership will focus on rural populations in the Indo-Gangetic Plain who typically live on less than $1.25 a day. The consortium is led by Banaras Hindu University (India) and Cornell University (NY).

Macquarie U Names First Sustainability Engagement Officer

Macquarie University (Australia) has appointed its first sustainability engagement officer as part of a sustainability agenda that calls for ecologically sound, socially just and economically viable university activities. Cindy Cunningham, who previously worked as a sustainability officer for more than 10 years in local councils, will lead two initiatives for staff engagement. The first, the Sustainability Representative Network, is comprised of sustainability champions from all departments and faculties across campus and acts as a liaison between the sustainability team and university staff and faculty. The second initiative is the Department Sustainability Challenge, where departments compete for prizes by completing sustainable actions.

Manipal U, Ashoka Trust Debut Ph.D. Program

The Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment is accepting applications for its interdisciplinary doctoral program in conservation science and sustainability studies. The program is recognized by Manipal University (India) and will provide a fellowship for two years. Applicants must have a master's degree in environmental sciences and will be expected to pursue environmental research for a multi-disciplinary dissertation committee.

Masdar, U.S. Dept of Energy Partner for Solar PV Coating Research

The Masdar Institute of Science and Technology (Abu Dhabi) has announced a collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy to test the performance of specially coated solar photovoltaic modules designed to avoid the moisture and cementation problems currently faced by PV module producers. Developed by the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the coatings will be tested at a solar field in Masdar City following exchanges of scientific and technical information with the Masdar Institute.

Newcastle U Hosts Carbon Speed Dating Event for 'Go Green Week'

The People & Planet student group at Newcastle University (UK) recently hosted "Go Green Week 2011," to raise sustainability awareness on campus. Events included a night of Carbon Speed Dating, free smoothies for students made out of fruit and vegetables from the local farmers market that were destined for the trash, and a showing of the movie, "Food, Inc."

Persian Gulf Universities Study Alternative Energy

Governments across the Arabian Peninsula are establishing programs and institutes dedicated to research into alternative energy and environmental sustainability, reports The Chronicle of Higher Education in a January article. The carbon-based wealth that fueled the growth of countries including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar has created a dependence on oil-powered desalination plants for water to a degree that salinity levels in the Persian Gulf have risen noticeably in the past few decades. More efficient desalination processes is just one environmental problem being tackled in new research centers around the Persian Gulf. Scientists and graduate students from around the world are also working on green technologies including more-affordable solar cells and new biofuels for aviation. Governments hope that new green technologies will spur commercial innovation and bring diversity to these oil-dependent economies.

Queen's U Belfast Library Earns Sustainability Award

The McClay Library at Queen's University Belfast (Ireland) has received the 2010 Sustainability Award from the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors. The new library features sustainable strategies based on natural ventilation and low energy use including a thermal mass that acts as a heat sink, regulating the temperature profile of the internal environment by absorbing heat during the day and releasing it to the space at night. A rainwater harvesting system uses recycled rainwater for toilets and internal environmental conditions from lighting to temperature and fresh air levels are monitored.

Saint Paul U Dumaguete Implements 'Nature-Friendly' Technology

Saint Paul University of Dumaguete (Phillipines) has opened a "nature-friendly" campus facility for mushroom, fruit and vegetable drying. The facility includes a waterless toilet, recycled indigenous materials and the use of solar power and green roof technology.

Shanghai Normal U Installs Solar Powered Street Lights

Shanghai Normal University (China) has installed eight solar energy street lights on its Fengxian campus that can be complemented with wind power. With an average daily use of 10 hours, the solar street lights are expected to save 7,304 kilowatt hours per year.

Texas A&M U at Qatar Students to Compete in Shell Eco-Marathon

College of Engineering students at Texas A&M University at Qatar are set to compete in this year's Shell Eco-Marathon. Since 1985, the global competition has challenged student teams to design and build fuel-efficient cars. The 2011 European edition will be held at the EuroSpeedway Lausitz track in Germany from May 26-28, 2011. Vehicles can use various fuels and energy sources including gas-to-liquids, petrol, biofuels, hydrogen and solar. Two teams at the university will compete in the Urban Concept category, one team with gas-to-liquids fuel and the other with a vehicle powered by petrol.

The Hong Kong U Science & Tech Holds Carbon Neutral Commencement

The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology recently achieved carbon neutrality with its 2010 university commencement, held for more than 10,000 students and parents. Carbon reduction measures included additional recycling bins, used cups and plates composting, a carbon-friendly menu and recycled paper and environmentally friendly ink for the commencement program printing. The post-event carbon audit revealed the achievement of carbon neutrality based on British Standards Institution's PAS 2060 protocol.

U Adelaide Provides Bike Commuting Support to Staff, Students

The University of Adelaide (Australia) recently implemented the Ecorider program, an 11-week behavior change effort to increase cycling trips to campus, improve fitness, save money, and reduce traffic congestion and campus emissions. The program provided 20 student and staff members with support in becoming regular commuting cyclists to campus with individual email communication and feedback, group training sessions and a communal blog. Improvement was measured through reported cycling trip data and monthly fitness testing. The Ecoriders completed 803 trips to the university in total and saved 25,890 minutes and $4,000 in transportation time and money.

U Belize Receives Government Funding for Solar Project

The University of Belize’s Central Campus has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the nation’s government for a photovoltaic solar project. The funding for this project comes from the government of Belize and the Japan International Cooperation Agency. The government of Belize will own and manage the PV system for the first decade and then transfer its ownership to the university at no charge.

U Canberra Bans Bottled Water Sales on Campus

The University of Canberra (Australia) has banned the sale of bottled water on campus. Bottled water will be replaced in campus cafes and shops by water vending machines that refill reusable water bottles at a cheaper price than bottled water. The university has also installed six water bottle refill stations on campus. The ban is estimated to reduce water bottle sales by 140,000 bottles per year.

U Exeter Receives Recycle Zones Donation

Part of Coca-Cola's nationwide "Keep It Going" campaign to increase recycling on college campuses, airports and hospitals, the University of Exeter (UK) is the latest campus to implement on-campus Recycle Zones. The company has provided the university with 200 specialized bins for card, paper, cans and bottles in popular areas on campus.

U Gloucestershire Wins Green Gown Award

In recognition of its Sustainability Team's work to facilitate change in teaching and learning for sustainability across departments, the University of Gloucestershire (UK) earned a 2010 Green Gown Award for Continuous Improvement. The first time that an educational initiative in sustainability has won in the Continuous Improvement Category, the award recognized new strategies and institutional support mechanisms instituted by the university that seek to transform student sustainability learning. The awards are administered by the United Kingdom's Environmental Association for Universities and Colleges. Applications for 2011 Green Gown Awards will open in April 2011.

UN Secretary Recognizes Renewable Energy Efforts of Masdar Inst

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recently recognized the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology's (Abu Dhabi) commitment to advancing and commercializing innovations in renewable energy and clean technology. "The future is showcased in Masdar," the Secretary-General said following a tour of the campus. "The technology on renewable and future energy will help economic growth, achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) targets, and bring healthcare, while benefiting the entire planet." The graduate school dedicated to clean energy research and education, developed with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, began classes in fall 2009. The campus is designed as a living energy efficiency laboratory with rooftop solar electric and thermal panels; building automation software and meters to monitor and control air conditioning and other energy use; and a fleet of driverless pods powered by onboard batteries for traveling around campus.

U Southern Queensland Offers Global Reporting Initiative Degree

The University of Southern Queensland (Australia) has partnered with City University of Seattle to offer an undergraduate accounting degree designed around the Global Reporting Initiative, the international standard for businesses to report against a range of protocol categories including economic, strategy and profile, product responsibility, society, labor practices and decent work, human rights and the environment. The new courses are offered through the University of Southern Queensland's existing accounting and sustainable business bachelor's degree program.

U Western Sydney Converts Food Waste to Energy with 'Pulpmaster'

The University of Western Sydney (Australia) has installed a food waste to energy recycling system dubbed the "Pulpmaster." The seed fund for the pilot project came from the university's green revolving fund, which provides upfront financing to staff and students for sustainability projects. The Australia-patented Pulpmaster system converts food waste into pulp that is transformed into green energy and/or fertilizer.

U Western Sydney Highlights Research for World Wetlands Day

The University of Western Sydney (Australia), which is home to three forested wetlands that form part of a critically endangered ecological community on its Hawkesbury campus, recently celebrated 2011 World Wetlands Day by highlighting wetland research activities. The Convention on Wetlands of International Importance, known as the Ramsar Convention, is an intergovernmental treaty that provides the framework for national action and international cooperation for the conservation and wise use of wetlands and their resources. Australia has been a member country since 1975, with 65 wetland sites.

American U Urges Congress to Cut Bottled Water Spending

American University's (DC) Office of Sustainability administered a "Tap Water Challenge" to attendees at a recent news conference at the Capitol. The conference was held to announce a Corporate Accountability International Report that revealed that the U.S. House of Representatives spends nearly $1 million on bottled water per year. The university challenged attendees including Takoma Park Mayor Bruce Williams to correctly identify tap water among popular brands of bottled water while blindfolded. The university reports that no one succeeded. In addition to urging Congress to renew investments in public water systems and cut spending on bottled water, the university will also ramp up on-campus efforts to discourage bottled water purchases including the addition of more than a hundred water bottle filling spigots on water fountains throughout campus.

Cal Poly Pomona Students Design Homes to Replace Wildfire Losses

Students at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona are working to design and build sustainable prototype homes for structures that were lost to southern California wildfires in 2007. Owned by the City of San Diego and leased to ranchers who maintain the land, the destroyed homes qualified for emergency assistance funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Known as the Pamo Valley Project, the City of San Diego has teamed with the university's Department of Architecture to engage students to design two low-cost structures for the site. The homes will feature water, energy and waste conservation strategies that will augment passive and active system performance. The Pamo Valley Project was recently awarded the 2010 National Council of Architectural Registration Boards Grant, which is designed to help architecture schools implement new programs that merge the practice of architecture and education in a studio or classroom setting.

Campus Sustainability Planning: A February Update

The University of California System reports that University of California campuses increased their number of LEED certified building projects during 2010 from 33 to 49. These projects contributed to the system's energy cost savings, which increased from $15 million to $21 million last year due to efficiency initiatives on all campuses. Also reported to AASHE in the recent past, Johns Hopkins University (MD) has released its first sustainability report. Though campus water consumption rose by 9 percent in fiscal year 2010, the university made progress with green building efforts including collecting, conserving and treating stormwater; the expanded use of green materials and cleaning products; and an increase of locally sourced and organic campus dining options. In related news, College of the Holy Cross (MA) has announced that it has reduced campus carbon emissions by 23.5 percent, four years ahead of its scheduled goal of 20 percent by 2015. A few of its strategies include the purchase of a long-term contract for electrical power from renewable energy provider TransCanada, a fuel switch from oil to natural gas in its boilers, and the intent to meet LEED certification for all new major construction and buildings. In more related news, Bowdoin College (ME) has pledged to become carbon neutral by 2020, removing from the atmosphere as much of the gases associated with climate change including greenhouse gases as it puts in. In addition to an expanded solar hot water system, plans to buy $35,000 this year in renewable energy credits and the launch of a building dashboard that provides real-time measurements of energy use of campus facilities, the college has plans to add a $3 million steam turbine generator to its central steam plant, saving $230,000 per year and trimming greenhouse emissions by 18 percent.

Cornell U Greek System Implements Sustainability Rating System

Cornell University's (NY) Greeks Go Green has launched LEAF, a new rating system that grades Greek chapters on their sustainability efforts. Through LEAF, chapters can receive up to 100 points for their sustainability practices. LEAF awards points in categories such as water conservation, energy conservation and green purchasing. Every 20 points represents a leaf, making the highest achievement earning five leaves. The system also recognizes environmental awareness education and sustainability-related service events, so chapters that do not have physical houses can still gain points.