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An Introduction to Campus Environmental Sustainability Indicators

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Keisha Payson, Bowdoin College. Julie Newman, Yale University. Intern: Heather Leibowitz, UVM '05 ... development that meets the needs of the present without ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An Introduction to Campus Environmental Sustainability Indicators


1
An Introduction to Campus Environmental
Sustainability Indicators
Northeast Campus Sustainability Consortium
Indicators Working Group
  • Gioia Thompson, University of Vermont (Chair)
  • Connie Leach Bisson, Middlebury College
  • Mary Jensen, Keene State College
  • Ramsay Huntley, Tufts University
  • Melissa Garcia Lamarca, Concordia University
  • Keisha Payson, Bowdoin College
  • Julie Newman, Yale University
  • Intern Heather Leibowitz, UVM 05

Created for Campus Consortium for Environmental
Excellence, September 2005
2
Environmental Indicators in the Context of
Sustainability
  • Sustainability is  "..development that meets
    the needs of the present without compromising the
    ability of future generations to meet their own
    needs"
  • World Commission on the Environment and
    Development, 1987
  • Question How will our communities and
    economic systems survive into the future?

3
Sustainability in Higher Education/Campus Greening
  • Ensure that critical activities are ecologically
    sound, socially just, and economically viable
  • Emphasize these concepts in curriculum, research,
    outreach
  • Prepare students to contribute as working
    citizens
  • Support surrounding community
  • Create institution that functions as sustainable
    community

4
Greening Campus Operations
  • Land use
  • Transportation, parking, fleet
  • Landscaping
  • Water use
  • Food
  • Purchasing
  • Hazardous waste management
  • Solid waste management
  • Energy use and sources

5
Sample Assessment Resources
  • Campus Consortium for Environmental Excellence
    C/U Self Tracking Tool
  • Sierra Youth Coalitions Campus Sustainability
    Assessment Framework
  • Good Companys Sustainable Pathways Toolkit
  • Campus Sustainability Assessment Project
  • Clean Air-Cool Planet greenhouse gas inventory

6
Types of Reports
  • Comprehensive sustainability assessments
  • Environmental reports
  • Other reports
  • Individual building performance report
  • Ecological footprint analysis
  • Greenhouse gas inventories

7
Sample Comprehensive Reports
  • University of Florida qualitative, covers
    research, education, operations, outreach,
    personnel, policies and practices
  • Michigan State University 16 social, economic,
    environmental indicators 76 graphs and tables
  • Concordia University (Montreal) multi-stakeholder
    process, 171 indicators on social, economic,
    environmental impact, 100 students involved

Social/community Environmental Economic
8
Sample Environmental Reports
  • Bowdoin College
  • Environmental Impact Audit, December 2000
  • Middlebury College
  • Climate Neutral Working Group report
  • Tufts University
  • Tufts Climate Initiative website, activities
  • University of Vermont
  • Tracking UVM Environmental Report Card 1990-2000
  • Yale University
  • Yale University Environment Report 1997-1998
    through 2003-2004

9
Example Tracking UVM Environmental Report Card
1990-2000
  • Land, water, energy, air, waste indicators
    1990-2000
  • Best management practices, community comments,
    next steps
  • Audience students, staff, faculty, trustees,
    legislature, community
  • Excerpted, adapted for educational projects
  • Key findings energy use, solid waste up despite
    best practices

University of Vermont Environmental
Council December 2002
10
Using Your Indicators
  • Track management practices in operations
  • Strategic planning
  • Master planning
  • Compliance assessment
  • Comparison with other institutions
  • Campus, community stakeholder education and
    engagement

11
Sample Educational Uses
  • Ex To promote awareness in residence halls
  • Electricity use reduction competitionOberlin
    College
  • of trash that could have been recycled (EcoRep
    waste sort results) Vermont
  • Total recycled / resident student, and Total
    trash / resident studentRecyclemania

12
Considerations Purpose
  • Academics engage intellectual resources of
    faculty and students in sustainability
  • Campus education awareness, understanding,
    motivation, behavior change
  • Decision-making support clear decisions, set
    priorities, engage stakeholders
  • Visibility create pressure on institution from
    internal and external sources

13
Considerations Constraints
  • Money financial, in-kind, investments in data
    systems
  • Time data and labor availability, reporting
    schedules
  • Relevance quality of data, culture, pressing
    issues, collaborations

14
Considerations Potential Pitfalls
  • Coordinator
  • Burnout
  • Time sink
  • Data dont exist in form they should
  • Danger of poor interactions with stakeholders
  • Institution
  • Reluctance to look bad
  • Perceived confidentiality issues
  • Difficulty in comparing school to school
  • Danger of drawing the wrong conclusions

15
Recommendation Start with key environmental
indicators
  • Solid waste recycling, composting
  • Tangible, measurable, understandable
  • Energyheating, electricity, transportation, and
    associated emissions
  • Collectively largest financial and environmental
    impact
  • Waterwater use and wastewater treatment
  • Significance depends on region

Available from C2E2.org
16
Measuring Now, and Maybe Later
  • Sample energy and waste measures
  • Probably measuring now
  • kWh, Btus, square feet
  • Tons waste to landfill, recycling (?)
  • Number of students, faculty, staff
  • Financial data
  • Might want to measure
  • Greenhouse gas emissions
  • Energy sources
  • How much of trash could have been recycled
  • Construction and demolition waste

17
Whats Next
  • Creative educational uses of indicators
  • Focus on key indicators (depth) and/or
  • Expansion to larger numbers of indicators
  • Perhaps formal reporting systems as part of
    Environmental Management Systems, ISO 14001
  • Suites of Indicators
  • Integrate into campus reporting systems

18
Suites of Energy Indicators
  • Example
  • Energy use from heating, electricity,
    transportation combined into one unit (terajoules
    or BTUs) shows relative environmental
    impactsoften heating and electricity about the
    same, transportation much lower
  • Cost of energy use from heating, electricity,
    transportation shows relative costs, return on
    investmentelectricity usually highest
  • Greenhouse gas emissions from energy uses show
    climate change impacts

19
Sample Energy Indicators Suite
20
Integrating Indicators into Planning, Reporting,
Surveying Systems
  • Examples
  • Campus Master Plan impervious surfaces
  • Transportation Plan single occupancy vehicle
    rate, commuter choice options
  • Utilities Plan emissions, greenhouse gases
  • Contracts recycled content in copier paper,
    local food served by dining services
  • Reports Env Health Safety IAQ complaints
  • Surveys awareness, attitudes (Student
    Government, Statistics classes)

21
RESOURCES
  • Organizations
  • Reports
  • Tools
  • Articles
  • Miscellaneous slides

22
1. ORGANIZATIONS
  • Campus Consortium for Environmental Excellence
  • www.c2e2.org
  • Education for Sustainability-West
  • www.esfwest.org
  • University Leaders for a Sustainable Future
  • www.ulsf.org
  • National Wildlife Federation
  • www.nwf.org
  • Clean Air-Cool Planet
  • www.cleanair-coolplanet.org

23
Campus Consortium for Environmental Excellence
(C2E2)
  • College University Sector Program www.c2e2.org
  • See also
  • Environmental Management Systems (EMS) 32
    institutions involved
  • EPA Best Management Practices (BMP)

24
2. REPORTS
  • Comprehensive
  • University of Florida
  • Michigan State
  • Concordia University (Montreal)
  • Environmental
  • Bowdoin College
  • Tufts University
  • Yale University

25
University of Florida
  • University of Florida Sustainability Task Force
    Final Report (2002)
  • Qualitatively focused report looking at a wide
    range of indicators for a sustainable
    institution
  • Research
  • Education
  • Campus Operations (including Land Management
    Biodiversity, Buildings, Energy and Resource Use,
    Transportation, Waste Management, etc.)
  • Community Outreach and Integration
  • Campus Community Personnel
  • Organizational Policies and Practices

26
Michigan State University
  • Campus Sustainability Report (2003)
  • Extensive report including 76 representational
    graphs and tables
  • Social, Economic, and Environmental Indicators
    (16 total)
  • Findings provide data on a wide range of campus
    issues from intramural sports to research
    funding to air emissions

27
Concordia University
28
171 Indicators organized in 10 areas
Concordia University
Eco-subsystem
People Subsystem
29
Sample Health Wellbeing Indicators
Concordia University
30
Tufts Climate Initiative (TCI)
  • Tufts University has committed to reducing GHG
    emissions by 7 below 1990 levels by 2012 this
    translates to a real reduction of about 30.
  • Carbon is the key metric for measuring the impact
    of construction, transportation, energy
    efficiency, personal action, and clean
    electricity.
  • TCIs work is funded by grants. University
    dollars fund efficiency and other investments.
  • TCIs focus is on efficiency, new construction,
    electricity procurement, and personal action.

31
Carbon emissions updated annually
(www.tufts.edu/tci )
A focus on improving electrical efficiency has
leveled electricity and decreased emissions on
the main campus.
32
University of Vermont Report Card Results
1990-2000
  • Less sustainable
  • Commuting miles
  • CO2 emissions
  • Energy use
  • Trash generation

Little change or inadequate data Land use
Air pollution from heating Recycling
Hazardous waste
More sustainable Energy sources Radioactive
waste Water use Storm water management
33
Yale Sustainability Metrics
Spectrum Category Indicators Units
For more details http//www.yale.edu/sustainabili
ty
34
3. TOOLS
  • College Consortium of Environmental Excellence
    (and EPA)
  • Colleges Universities Self Tracking Tool
    http//www.c2e2.org/cgi-admin/navigate.cgi
  • Environmental Protection Agency
  • Sector Programs College University Sector
    http//www.epa.gov/sectors/colleges/
  • Sierra Youth Coalition
  • Campus Sustainability Assessment Framework
    http//www.syc-cjs.org/index.php
  • Good Company
  • Sustainable Pathways Toolkit http//www.goodcompan
    y.com/lib/documents/
  • Campus Sustainability Assessment Project CSAP
  • Online Database http//csap.envs.wmich.edu/pages/r
    es_csa.html

35
C2E2/EPA Colleges Universities Self Tracking
Tool
  • Colleges and Universities Self Tracking Tool,
    developed by EPA College and University Sectors
    Performance Measurement Workgroup
    http//www.c2e2.org/tracking_tool/index.html
    online tool to collect and analyze data on campus
    environmental impacts.
  • Tracks and benchmarks environmental indicators
    against aggregated data from other schools of
    similar size and type.

36
Good Companys Sustainable Pathways Toolkit
  • Assessment tool for university and college
    customers 20 core indicators and 10
    supplementary, each with performance benchmark.
    (ex. UNC-Greensboro)
  • Compact and focused still with some depth of
    sustainability issues and coverage of human and
    ecosystem dimensions.
  • Involves limited consultation of and involvement
    of campus community.

37
The Campus Sustainability Assessment Project
(CSAP)
  • The Campus Sustainability Assessment Database is
    an extensive, searchable record of CSA projects
    throughout the United States, Canada, and several
    other countries. It contains information on over
    1,100 projects and assessments of all types.
  • http//csap.envs.wmich.edu/pages/res_csa.html

38
Campus Sustainability Assessment Framework (CSAF)
A sustainable campus community acts upon its
local and global responsibilities to protect and
enhance the health and well being of humans and
ecosystems. It actively engages the knowledge of
the university community to address the
ecological and social challenges that we face now
and in the future. Sierra Youth Coalition
39
New Jersey Higher Education Partnership for
Sustainability
  • Rating system 1-7
  • Solid waste
  • Energy
  • Water/sewage
  • Transportation
  • Indoor air quality
  • Landscape
  • Food service
  • New structures/renovations
  • Procurement
  • Curriculum

40
Greenhouse Gas Calculators
  • Tufts Climate Initiative used own spreadsheet in
    1999, prior to World Resources Institute (WRI)
    method http//www.tufts.edu/tci
  • WRI tool is used by Regional Greenhouse Gas
    Initiative (RGGI), often used for businesses
    http//www.rggr.us/registriesbackground.html
  • Ralph Torrie software through ICLEI often used
    for cities http//www.cacpsoftware.org/
  • Clean AirCool Planet calculator for higher
    education http//www.cleanair-coolplanet.org/tool
    kit/content/view/43/124/
  • DOE software http//www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/1605/frn
    tvrgg.html

41
4. Articles
  • Cole, Lindsay (2003). Assessing Sustainability
    of Canadian University Campuses Development of
    a Campus Sustainability Assessment Framework.
    Victoria, Canada Royal Roads University.
  • Graedel, T.E. (2002) Quantitative sustainability
    in a college or university setting in
    International Journal of Sustainability in
    Higher Education Vol.3 No.4, pp.346-358
  • Shriberg, Michael (2002). Institutional
    assessment tools for sustainability in higher
    education strengths, weaknesses and
    implications for practice and theory in Higher
    Education Policy 15, p 153-167.

42

5. Miscellaneous
  • Ecological Footprint
  • Sustainable Development
  • Sustainable Community Indicators
  • Benchmarks
  • NEG/ECP climate pledge
  • Global Reporting

43
Our Ecological Footprint (EF)
  • www.rprogress.org

44
New England Governors and Eastern Canadian
Premiers Pledge
  • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by
    the year 2010
  • 10 below 1990 levels by the year 2020, and
  • Ultimately stabilize the climate by making
    reductions of 75-85

45
Sustainable Development
  • To be sustained
  • Nature earth, biodiversity, ecosystems
  • Life support ecosystem services, resources,
    environment
  • Community cultures, groups, places
  • To be developed
  • People child survival, life expectancy,
    education, equity, equal opportunity
  • Economy wealth, productive sectors, consumption
  • Society institutions, social capital, states,
    regions
  • T.E.Graedel, 2002

46
Sustainability Challenges Ahead
  • Run civilization on sunshine
  • Stabilize then reduce global population
  • Protect remaining biological diversity
  • Prevent pollution
  • Manage agriculture and forests sustainably
  • Repair ecosystems damaged in the industrial era
  • Improve basic equity and fairness
  • David Orr, forward to Ecodemia

47
Sustainable Community Indicators
  • Address carrying capacity
  • Address causes and effects
  • Are relevant, understandable, and usable
  • Take 25-50 year view
  • Measure progress
  • Explain sustainability
  • Educate community
  • Show linkages
  • Motivate and focus action

www.sustainablemeasures.com
48
Sample Sustainability Indicators
49
Global Business Reporting
  • Global Reporting Initiative (gri.org)
  • External reporting framework to communicate
  • actions taken to improve economic, environmental,
    and social performance
  • the outcomes of such actions and
  • future strategies for improvement.
  • Global Environmental Management Initiative
    (gemi.org)
  • Sustainable Development Planner
  • Climate Change Planner
  • Water Planner

50
Ready to set benchmarks?
  • Good indicator
  • Meaningful measure of significant impact
  • Involves relatively little effort and expense for
    information gathering
  • Good benchmark
  • Sets a high bar that represents significant
    progress within an indicator
  • Reasonable expectation of performance
  • --Good Company
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