Showing posts with label energy efficiency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label energy efficiency. Show all posts

Trane Helping Schools Cut their Energy Bills in Half

The combination of efficiency and renewables is driving big savings at Massachusetts' Dighton-Rehoboth Regional School District. A performance contract signed with HVAC manufacturer Trane Inc. is expected to slash the districts annual energy spending by 62 percent, or $564,000 each year.

Trane is far more than just a leading manufacturer of HVAC equipment, they also offers cost saving projects and renewable energy efficiency solutions. They helped to design and install the district's 1.2-megawatt solar photo-voltaic system including five carport canopies ranging in size from 117 kW to 639 kW. This system now generates around 75 percent of the energy used by the district.

"Local officials and K-12 administrators appreciate our ability to combine energy conservation measures in their facilities, with a customized scope of renewable energy systems all through one cohesive agreement" said Leo F. McNeil, regional director of comprehensive solutions at Trane. "It makes sense to begin by reducing the amount of energy consumed in facilities, and then determine the appropriate amount of power to be generated on-site through renewables. In this way, we can maximize operational and economic benefits for our clients."

In addition to high efficiency roofs and windows, the $19 million improvements made to the Dighton-Rehoboth district’s schools include high-efficiency boilers and a smart automated HVAC system with energy management capabilities. Smart monitoring applications track real-time energy savings. The Solar-Log system generates cumulative power consumption data which provides energy management data and serves as an educational tool.

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The End of Incandescent Light Bulbs and the Dawn of Lighting Efficiency Mandates

The era of the incandescent light bulb is coming to an end. The governments of the United States, Canada, Mexico, Malaysia and South Korea introduced measures to phase out most incandescent light bulbs. The measures came into effect on January 1, 2014. These countries joined the EU, Russia, Brazil and other nations that have already banned most incandescent lights.

Phase-out regulations effectively prohibit the manufacture, importation or sale of current incandescent light bulbs for general lighting. The regulations would allow sale of future versions of incandescents if they are sufficiently energy efficient.

Compact fluorescent lamps or CFL's may be the next form of lighting to be banned as they contain mercury a potent neurotoxin, which is especially dangerous to children and pregnant women. CFLs are also criticized for starting poorly when very cold, and most types cannot be dimmed.

The best option at present are LED lights which last longer and use less energy than either incandescent or CFL lighting.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Video: The UK's Green Deal



A short film explaining the importance of the UK's Green Deal. This innovative program from will help homeowners to make their homes more energy efficient. The Green Deal will radically reduce their home heating bills while substantially reducing the UK's emissions profile. It will also create jobs and regenerate the national economy.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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UK Government Investments in Efficiency and Renewable Energy

The UK government is making massive investments in the green economy. Firms in the UK cleantech sector are benefiting tremendously from the government's investments in areas like efficiency and renewable energy.

The UK is even launching a Green Investment Bank (GIB) which is a world first. The GIB is a chance to bring a truly sustainable institution to the UK and drive forward a low carbon economy. It is scheduled to launch in 2015/16. The bank will offer a large deal flow within a large corporate finance sector including access to finance teams, leading green technology providers, a strong public private sector partnership and a commitment to research and development.

In 2010 the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) said there was a 27% increase in renewable energy consumption from 42.6TWh in 2008 to 54TWh in 2010 – representing 3.3% of total energy consumed. The energy from wind generation increased by 46% from 7 terawatt hours (TWh) in 2008 to 10.2TWh in 2010, and in 2010 achieved 5GW of offshore and onshore wind capacity.

Difficult economic circumstances have slowed the growth rate of wind turbines built in 2011 compared to 2010, but they are still growing. As revealed by the Guardian, in the year to the end of November, 540MW of new turbines, on land and offshore, were built – comprising 200 onshore turbines and 50 offshore. In 2010 1,192MW of turbine capacity was constructed.

The DECC announced a £4 million investment for 82 local energy projects. The projects the government is supporting includes energy efficiency verification, well insulated show homes and events that promote the use of renewable power such as solar and wind.

The UK government's Green Deal is a bold attempt to grow the economy and develop a more sustainable future. As explained on the DECC Website, the Energy Act 2011 includes provisions for the new 'Green Deal', which intends to reduce carbon emissions cost effectively by revolutionising the energy efficiency of British properties.

The new innovative Green Deal financial mechanism eliminates the need to pay upfront for energy efficiency measures and instead provides reassurances that the cost of the measures should be covered by savings on the electricity bill.

A new Energy Company Obligation (ECO) will integrate with the Green Deal, allowing supplier subsidy and Green Deal Finance to come together into one seamless offer to the consumer.

“We face a gigantic challenge in the coming years to keep the lights on and energy bills down,” said energy secretary Chris Huhne. “This means nurturing cleaner, more secure, homegrown energy sources here in the UK so we are not so dependent on imported gas, and boosting the energy efficiency of our homes and businesses to cut out waste.”

The Bank of England is expected to announce a new batch of quantitative easing* totaling at least £50bn in February 2012. A new report from the Green New Deal Group and Southampton University economics professor Richard Werner, has suggested that rather than go to banks the money should be directly infused into green investments like efficiency and renewable energy.

Richard Werner is the originator of the term quantitative easing, he earned a BSc at the LSE and he recieved his doctorate in economics from Oxford. He also spent a year at the University of Tokyo. His 1991 discussion paper at the Institute for Economics and Statistics at Oxford warned about the imminent 'collapse' of the Japanese banking system and the threat of the "greatest recession since the Great Depression".

Werner indicates that giving money directly to green investments will create thousands of new jobs, improve energy security and tackle climate change.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

*Definition of 'Quantitative Easing'A government monetary policy occasionally used to increase the money supply by buying government securities or other securities from the market. Quantitative easing increases the money supply by flooding financial institutions with capital, in an effort to promote increased lending and liquidity.

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Video: GE Creating Jobs with Fuel Efficient Airplanes



GE has launched a new ad campaign that shows American innovation at work and the company’s commitment to providing Americans jobs by building quieter and more fuel-efficient airplanes.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Video: Steve Jobs on Computer Efficiency


Steve Jobs was a dynamic and visionary leader who understood the value of efficiency. He helped to make personal computers the "bicycle for the mind". Jobs said that the computer is an efficient vehicle for the mind just as the advanced bicycle is an efficient vehicle for human locomotion. According to the chart employed by Jobs in this video, a conventional bicycle is capable of about 40 MPH, and an HPV is theoretically capable of more than double that at about 80 MPH, (Current record is 83.3 MPH). The crux is that the efficiency of computers has assisted many millions of people. This notion of efficiency applies across the board. We need to become more efficient (and thus more productive) in every facet of human life.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Bill Increases Energy Efficiency in Oregon's Schools

Bill 2960 is bringing energy efficiency upgrades to Oregon schools. The bill enabled school districts to apply for low cost financing to pay for energy efficiency upgrades in schools.

Utility bills are one of the largest expenses for most Oregon school districts and are growing about 10 percent every year. Upgrading older buildings improves efficiency, ventilation and lighting while riding schools of mold and asbestos.

“Cool Schools is a triple-win for Oregon,” said Governor Kitzhaber. “The program will bring family-wage jobs, cost savings, and better learning environments to schools in communities across the state.”

These types of efficiency measures have been proven to decrease absenteeism and improve student test scores.

This bill also creates green jobs, for every $1 million invested in energy upgrades the state estimates that 15 jobs are created.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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NYU's Energy Efficient Power Generation

Energy Use in New York City schools is down 11% since 2008, and New York University's (NYU) super efficient CoGeneration power plant is now fully operational. NYU has been making their own power since the ’70s and they recently replaced their oil-fired CoGeneration power plant with a $125 million power plant that is 90 percent more efficient than their old plant. It creates 23 percent less carbon dioxide emissions and has twice the power output.

The new plant will provide electricity for lights, elevators and computers as well as heating and cooling. “This CoGen plant is unique in New York and certainly around the country because of its efficiency,” said John Bradley, assistant VP for Sustainability, Energy, and Technical Services at NYU. “ NYU’s CoGen will be well into the 90 percent range of efficiency, where a typical boiler plant is 50-60 percent efficient.”

The plant is part of NYU’s carbon reducing plan know as the Climate Action Plan (CAP). The CAP program was started by New York City Mayor Bloomberg’s PlaNYC Climate Challenge which asked all city colleges and universities to cut their carbon emissions voluntarily by 30 percent by 2017.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Green Education Foundation Programs for K-12 Students

Green Education Foundation (GEF) has numerous programs for K-12 students and teachers worldwide. For 2011 GEF has developed several new green education programs including The Green Thumb Challenge, National Green Week, Green Energy Challenge, Green Building Program and I Play Green.

See the full selection of GEF's programs here and see GEF's curriculum here.

Click here to register for free and to gain full access to GEF’s comprehensive library of standards-based lessons and activities.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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The Green Education Foundation for K-12 Students

Green Education Foundation (GEF) is committed to creating a sustainable future through the education of students from K-12. GEF provides curriculum and resources for students and teachers worldwide with the goal of challenging youth to think holistically and critically about global environmental concerns and solutions.

GEF couples standards-based curricula with active participation, acknowledging that children learn best through hands-on activities that enhance their critical thinking skills. GEF is a non-profit organization and one of the Web's largest environmental educational communities.

GEF’s annual National Green Week program mobilizes millions of students each year to participate in eco-challenges that empower school communities to achieve measurable and sustainable goals in waste reduction and energy conservation.

The GEF Community provides schools, individuals, classes, groups and sports teams with a way to communicate with one another (either privately or publicly). GEF is also a platform to share environmental best practices in an effort to protect the planet's valuable resources.

GEF members receive ongoing updates to lesson plans and activities, are automatically entered into drawings for free green products (such as garden and compost kits, mini-solar cars and houses, green books and videos) and have access to Green In-Action awards, plus much more.

All GEF's programs are free, participants are able to select the program(s) that are right for their organization.

Participate by creating an account at GEF where you can edit your information, join GEF's Eco-Challenge groups or create a group of your own. Registered participants can share school, class or group projects, photos, videos, stories and more.

Register here for free to gain full access to the GEF library of standards-based lessons and activities.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Sierra's 2011 List of Cool Green Schools Points West

For many years early settlers of America went west seeking opportunities and Sierra's 2011 list of green schools once again points west. According to Sierra magazine’s fifth-annual ranking of the nation’s “Coolest” schools, some of the most eco-conscious colleges are out West.

Sierra's list indicates that many of the greenest schools in America are located on the West Coast (7 out of the top 10). The University of California has an astounding four schools in the top 10.

Due in part to the fact that they do not get any of their energy from coal, the University of Washington (UW) in Seattle was ranked as the best school overall. Hydropower provides 90 percent of the energy at UW. All of UW's building constructed after 2006 are LEED Certified, all new appliance purchases are Energy-Star rated, and recycling is everywhere.

A special mention goes to number 9 ranked schoool, Evergreen College in Olympia, Washington, which plans to go carbon neutral by 2020.

Sierra's rating system has nine categories: energy, efficiency, food, academics, purchasing, transportation, waste management, administration, and financial investment, as well as a tenth miscellaneous category.

Here is the list of the top 20 green schools, as ranked by Sierra magazine:

1. University of Washington (Seattle, Wash.)
2. Green Mountain College (Poultney, Vt.)
3. University of California, San Diego (San Diego, Calif.)
4. Warren Wilson College (Asheville, N.C.)
5. Stanford University (Stanford, Calif.)
6. University of California, Irvine (Irvine, Calif.)
7. University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, Calif.)
8. University of California, Davis (Davis, Calif.)
9. Evergreen State College (Olympia, Wash.)
10. Middlebury College (Middlebury, Vt.)

11. University of New Hampshire
12. Appalachian State University
13. Colby College
14. Western Washington University
15. University of California, Los Angeles
16. University of Connecticut
17. Clark University
18. Cornell University
19. Bowdoin College
20. University of Maryland

To see where your school ranked, go to Sierra's list of Cool Schools.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Economic Development is the Only Way Forward

Some of the most passionate supporters of the environment argue that we cannot make the necessary changes within the current consumer oriented capitalist system. They point to the fact that growth in the 20th century was all about resource depletion.

Economic growth is not an end, but rather a means to an end. Because economic growth is premised on the concept of increasing quantity, it may be more productive to frame the issue in terms of economic development. Economic development looks at growth as a means of achieving a higher level of individual and societal well-being. While economic growth is about quantity, economic development is about quality. A well developed economy is one that meets people's needs and provides well-being for everyone.

Economic development is based on the collective good which is ultimately about creating more value per person.

UNEP's Executive Director Achim Steiner said in the statement: "With 2.5 billion people living on less than two dollars a day and with more than two billion people being added to the global population by 2050, it is clear that we must continue to develop and grow our economies. But this development cannot come at the expense of the very life support systems on land, in the oceans or in our atmosphere."

Growth and resource depletion are not inexorably linked and given the urgency, the green economy is the only solution we have of capable of addressing the environmental and social threats we face.

We simply do not have time to rebuild society anew, nor is it reasonable to wipe the slate clean. In the form of economic development, growth can serve the earth and its inhabitants. However future growth will not be based on wanton resource depletion, it will be about increased efficiency and productivity.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Surge in Growth Predicted for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy in 2011

The future of renewable energy looks very bright. Although energy efficiency will be the main sector in the coming years, wind energy and solar power will see meteoric growth.

The global clean energy market will continue to grow in 2011. According to forecasts by Kachan & Co., a US consulting firm that specializes in green technologies, renewable sources of energy will contribute to the ongoing recovery in 2011 and the ongoing recovery will contribute to the growth of renewables.

Energy efficiency, including smart grid technologies, will lead clean technologies in 2011. Energy efficiency investments in the US and Europe, as well as in some large emerging countries will drive this growth in 2011. Even Russia has recently launched an ambitious energy efficiency plan.

Growth forecasts of renewable energy production in 2011 are attributable to several factors. While concerns about the environment and the effects of climate change are driving the growth of renewables, they are secondary concerns. The primary factor driving the growth of renewables in 2011 is the ongoing recovery of the global economy. The recovery increases demand for oil and this increases the price of a barrel of crude, which in turn will make renewables more cost competitive.

China became the leader in renewable energy in 2010 and will widen the gap with other major countries in 2011. The Chinese market for clean technologies may be the largest and fastest growing in the world, however, there are also significant opportunities for companies in the West.


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GOVgreen Conference & Expo

On November 9-10, 2010, GOVgreen held their Conference & Expo in Washington, DC. The event included eco-friendly car displays and over 100 exhibitors selling green products and services.

The keynote address was delivered on November 10, by environmentalist and president of the Waterkeeper Alliance, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. Mr Kennedy also took part in a press conference which followed.

There were technical Workshops and a plenary session with key representatives from DoD, DoS, GSA and EPA. In total there were 30 educational sessions presented by 85 speakers.

This event was organized to help government employees, military personnel and contractors learn about and comply with federal sustainability initiatives mandated by President Obama’s Executive Order 13514. It provides solutions for the government to reduce its carbon footprint, addressing areas such as energy, conservation, transportation and facilities.

GOVgreen conferences are free for government and military employees and open to contractors and consultants.

For more information go to GOVgreen.


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The Implications of the Growth of Green Buildings

The Implications of the Growth of Green Buildings


This video by the Washington State Department of Ecology provides a good overview of the effects of green building.

Despite the tough economic times, a 2009 survey conducted by National Real Estate Investor in partnership with the U.S. Green Building Council showed that sustainability in commercial real estate grew at a prodigious rate.

More than 88% of developers and 86% of corporate executives say they consider green design to be as or more important than it was before the current economic slump. In fact, LEED certified projects showed an impressive 47% increase over the previous 12 month period.

These buildings represent 273 million square feet of new construction and major renovation on commercial and institutional properties, up from 133 million square feet the previous year. Another 25,608 properties totaling approximately 6.3 billion square feet are currently registered with the LEED, up from 1.3 billion square feet last year.

Green buildings are an increasingly powerful economic driver. By 2013, the green building industry is projected to contribute $554 billion to the U.S. gross domestic product.

Compared to conventional buildings, green buildings involve significant changes in design, construction, operation and maintenance. These changes have far reaching implications that help reduce environmental degradation and provide green jobs.
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Top 10 Green Building Trends for 2010

Green buildings are more energy efficient and provide greater value then traditional homes. The appeal of sustainable housing was highlighted in the 2009 McGraw Hill Construction report on the Green Home Consumer, which shows that green homes are generally secure from price erosion. Although 2009 was a slow year, green building bucked the trend by posting substantial growth.

At the beginning of the year, the Earth Advantage Institute, a leading nonprofit green building resource that has certified more than 11,000 sustainable homes, published its top ten green building trends in 2010.

1. Custom and web-based display panels that show real-time home energy use, and even real-time energy use by individual appliances.

2. More accurate energy rating systems for homes and office spaces has caught the attention of energy agencies and legislators around the country.

3. Building information modeling (BIM) software, (the continued evolution of CAD software for building design) has produced new add-on tools with increasingly accurate algorithms for energy modeling as well as embedded energy properties for many materials and features. This will prove instrumental in predicting building performance. BIM developers will soon be offering more affordable packages aimed at smaller firms and individual builders.

4. Lenders and insurers have come to see green homes and buildings as better for their bottom line and are working to get new reduced-rate loan products, insurance packages, and metrics into place. Lenders and insurers are realizing green home and building owners are more responsible, place higher value on maintenance and lower operating costs, and are less likely to default.

5. "Rightsizing" of homes due to the understanding that a larger home no longer translates into greater equity. Energy prices are expected to rise over time and this makes smaller more energy efficient homes a better value.

6. Eco-districts that encourage the creation of low-impact communities where residents have access to most services and supplies within walking or biking distance.

7. Water conservation to reduce residential water use which accounts for more than half of the publicly supplied water in the US. The EPA's voluntary WaterSense specification for new homes reduces water use by about 20 percent compared to a conventional new home. Water is an essential resource and water scarcity is a growing problem.

8. Documenting, measuring, and reducing greenhouse gas creation in building materials and processes. Carbon Calculation for buildings that can help homeowners reduce their carbon emissions (homes account for approximately half of the carbon emitted into the atmosphere).

9. Net zero buildings generate more energy than it uses over the course of a year, as a result of relatively small size, extreme efficiencies and onsite renewable energy sources.

10. Sustainable building education will supply new learning opportunities, not just for designers and builders, but for the entire chain of professionals involved in the building industry, from real estate to finance, and insurance.
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The Green Building Focus Conference and Expo

Education was the focus of the 2010 Green Building Focus Conference and Expo. The event was a showcase for the latest in sustainable building development.

The Green Building Focus was held between August 24th and 27th, and hosted by the city of Birmingham, Alabama. The city of Birmingham is the largest construction hub in the Southeast, and it is quickly becoming the region’s hub for green building activity as well.

With the growing demand for green building, this year’s conference sought to inform and educate the region’s architects, engineers, home owners, construction professionals, faculty and students.

The Green Building Focus explored recent trends, technologies and materials available in the green building movement. The conference also addressed topics including, “The Greening of Corporate America,” “Private and Federal Incentives for Green Projects,” and “International Green Construction Code.”

There were workshops and a business expo with more than 150 vendors showcasing environmentally friendly products and services and featuring some of the world's leading authorities on sustainable development.

Speakers included Karan Grover, an internationally acclaimed architect and winner of the 2004 USGBC platinum award for greenest building on Earth. Another conference speaker, Hoover Mayor Tony Petelos said, "It takes leadership from the top all the way down to the public buying into it."

Despite the challenges reviewed by Mayor Petelos, the Green Building Focus was a window into the innovations that are driving the growth of green homes.
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Sierra's Top 100 Cool Schools

Sierra's fourth annual Coolest Schools survey was sent to 900 colleges and universities across the United States. A total of 162 schools responded to the questionnaire and detailed their sustainability efforts.

This year, after consulting the Club's conservation experts, Sierra shifted the weighting of its survey question. The new ranking system now gives more weight to each school's energy supply. That adjustment caused a significant reorganization of the schools in the list compared to last year.

Although energy supply carried the most significance, nine other categories were considered in measuring a school's commitment to sustainability: efficiency, food, academics, purchasing, transportation, waste management, administration, financial investments, and a catchall section titled "other initiatives." No school scored a perfect 100; Green Mountain came closest, with 88.6.

1. Green Mountain College (Poultney, VT) Score: 88.6
GMC excels in most categories, and it's the MVP when it comes to creativity. The campus gets power and heat from biomass and biogas and plans to be carbon-neutral by next year.

2. Dickinson College (Carlisle, PA) Score: 86.1
Dickinson integrates sustainability studies across its curricula, maintains a high-efficiency energy plant, and runs a hands-on biodiesel shop.

3. Evergreen State College (Olympia, WA) Score: 85.9
The student body's self-imposed clean-energy fee enables Evergreen to purchase renewable-energy credits for 100 percent of its electricity.

4. University of Washington (Seattle, WA) Score: 84.7
UW's annual solutions-oriented Environmental Innovation Challenge, which teams students from disparate departments, represents interdisciplinary eco-thinking at its best.

5. Stanford University (Stanford, CA) Score: 84.6
Stanford's $225 million Global Climate and Energy Project focuses on diverse cutting-edge technologies to help lower carbon dioxide emissions.

6. University of California, Irvine (Irvine, CA) Score: 84.4
Incentives for alternative transportation minimize car commuting to UCI, even though it's in SUV-obsessed Orange County.

7. Northland College (Ashland, WI) Score: 84.2
Northland's 12-year-old, pre-LEED McLean Environmental Living and Learning Center has composting toilets, low-flow water fixtures, solar panels, and a wind turbine.

8. Harvard University (Cambridge, MA) Score: 82.8
America's oldest college invests in the future with a revolving fund that loans money for recycling and solar projects. Payback comes in the form of efficiency savings.

9. College of the Atlantic (Bar Harbor, ME) Score: 82.5
A sustainable-business curriculum and an affiliated "venture incubator" encourage eco-entrepreneurs.

10. Hampshire College (Amherst, MA) Score: 82.4
Hampshire's responsible-investing committee, one of the oldest in the country, aims to make the school's endowment benefit the environment.

11. [Tie] University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA) Score: 82
The UCSC Banana Slugs have an impressive 73 percent waste-diversion rate and plan to reach 100 percent by 2020.

11. [Tie] Middlebury College (Middlebury, VT) Score: 82
A team of ambitious undergrads made the finals of the prestigious, tech-heavy 2011 Solar Decathlon, a notable feat for a small liberal-arts school.

13. University of Colorado, Boulder (Boulder, CO) Score: 81.9
A national environmental leader, CU Boulder is the home of the influential Center of the American West, a think tank that addresses Western land and energy issues.

14. Warren Wilson College (Asheville, NC) Score: 81.8
Warren Wilson gets more than a third of its food from farms within 500 miles of campus--including from its own six-acre organic garden.

15. University of California, San Diego (San Diego, CA) Score: 81.6
UCSD's dining halls offer "Meatless Mondays" to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. No matter what day it is, 35 percent of the school's cafeteria food is organic.

16. [TIE] University of California, Davis (Davis, CA) Score: 81.2
Davis students can learn ecologically viable farming methods by majoring in sustainable agriculture and food systems.

16. [TIE] University of Vermont (Burlington, VT) Score: 81.2
Over the past decade, UVM has cut its number of car commuters by half, thanks to incentives for students who use alternative transportation.

18. University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia) Score: 80.7
By awarding grants to faculty and students for innovative sustainability proposals, Penn spurs competition to help execute its climate action plan.

19. New York University (New York, NY) Score: 80.6
NYU plans to install a 6,500-square-foot green roof atop its 11-story Stern School of Business, in Greenwich Village.

20. Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, GA) Score: 80.5
Georgia Tech has a full-time alternative-transportation manager and is constructing a million-gallon cistern to reduce its stormwater runoff by 30 percent.

21. Cornell University
22. Colorado College
23. Oberlin College
23. Oregon State University
25. UCLA
26. Yale University
27. Portland State University
28. Princeton University
29. Furman University
30. Smith College
31. Pomona College
32. UC Berkeley
33. University of New Hampshire
34. Arizona State University
35. Marlboro College
36. University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
37. Brown University
38. Macalester College
39. UC Merced
40. UNC-Chapel Hill
41. Colorado State University
42. Emory University
43. Washington University in St. Louis
44. UC Santa Barbara
45. SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
46. Bowdoin College
47. University of Michigan
48. Western Washington University
49. Boston University
50. University of Connecticut
51. Wellesley College
52. Willamette University
53. Villanova University
54. Duke University
55. Pacific Lutheran University
56. University of Louisville
57. DePaul University
58. George Washington University
59. Naropa University
60. Seattle University
61. Williams College
62. Northern Arizona University
63. Bard College
64. Carnegie Mellon University
65. Sterling College
66. Dartmouth College
67. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
68. State University of New York At Binghamton
69. University of La Verne
70. San Francisco State University
71. Colby College
72. Case Western Reserve University
73. Point Loma Nazarene University
74. Western State College of Colorado
75. Rochester Institute of Technology
76. Whitman College
77. Lewis & Clark College
78. Swarthmore College
79. Worcester Polytechnic Institute
80. Humboldt State University
81. Drexel University
82. University of Florida
83. Mills College
84. Elon University
85. Hamilton College
86. University of Idaho
87. Amherst College
88. Metropolitan State College of Denver
89. Central Michigan University
90. Hobart & William Smith Colleges
91. Allegheny College
92. University of Missouri-Kansas City
93. Appalachian State University
94. University of Georgia
95. Bentley University
96. Southern Oregon University
97. Knox College
98. Montclair State University
99. Augsburg College
100. University of San Diego

To see of a list of all 162 schools go to Sierra's Cool School Rankings.
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The Princeton Review Green Colleges Honor Role


The Princeton Review researches issues of sustainability as they pertain to college and every year they publish their green ratings. In April, 2010, they partnered with the U.S. Green Building Council to produce The Princeton Review's Guide to 286 Green Colleges.

The Princeton Review’s second annual Green Rating evaluates colleges and universities on their environmentally-related policies, practices and academic offerings. Each of this year's 697 colleges were assessed and assigned a Green Rating.

Here is an alphabetical list of the top 18 schools leading the way with their commitment to sustainability. All of these schools received the highest green rating possible and earned a place on what is known as The Princeton Review’s Green Honor Roll.

Arizona State University at the Tempe Campus

Curriculum: Established in 2007, ASU’s School of Sustainability, the first of its kind in the US. Sustainability is a fundamental precept underlying its teaching and learning, research and business missions. The school offers transdisciplinary degree programs that advance practical solutions to environmental, economic and social challenges. The school has over 60 faculty representing over 40 disciplines and offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs along with professional certificates.

Campus: The Tempe campus has the largest collection of energy-providing solar panels on a single US university campus. ASU subsidizes bus and light rail passes for all students and employees and offers car-sharing and a carpool program with special parking privileges. A student-run bicycle co-op offers low- or no-cost bike repairs and free bike rentals.

College of the Atlantic (Bar Harbor, ME)

Curriculum: This college has one major, Human Ecology. How humans relate to our environment is the core of the curriculum. COA has a new Trans-Atlantic Food Systems program and a growing undergraduate green and socially responsible business program.

Campus: COA has been carbon neutral since 2007. All electricity comes from renewable hydropower; new buildings and some old are cleanly heated via renewable wood pellets. An organic Beech Hill Farm (partially powered by a wind turbine) offers organic produce to campus, local schools and food banks. Recycling bins are in every office, composting bins in every kitchen and composting toilets in all new buildings.

The Evergreen State College (Olympia, WA)

Curriculum: The Washington Center for Improving the Quality of Undergraduate Education at Evergreen has launched the Curriculum for the Bioregion, an effort that focuses on incorporating environmental and sustainability issues into general education college courses throughout the Pacific Northwest. Students recently launched the Center for Sustainable Entrepreneurship, an effort to put their business skills to use in socially responsible ventures. Their on-campus farm is used to teach a broad range of courses such as small-scale organic agriculture, ethnobotany, visual arts, beekeeping, forest ecology, and ecological agriculture.

Campus: Spread over one thousand-acres, this campus features miles of trails, a half mile of beach on Puget Sound, wetlands, forests and an organic farm. Evergreen has purchased a fleet of electric cars to replace many of its gasoline and diesel vehicles. Evergreen students pay a self-imposed clean energy fee to ensure that 100 percent of the college’s electricity comes from renewable sources. The school has also reduced its landfill waste by more than 97,000 pounds since 2008.

Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, GA)

Curriculum: With 21 endowed chairs, 23 research chairs and more than 100 sustainable classes Georgia Tech offers a comprehensive green curriculum.

Campus: Sustainability is a key component of Georgia Tech’s Campus Master Plan and Landscape Master Plan. Besides using environmentally friendly hand soap, paper products, cleaning equipment and other supplies, Georgia Tech requires that all vendors provide green products. The Institute’s cleaning equipment uses 70 percent less water and 90 percent less chemicals than traditional equipment. To further conserve water resources, Georgia Tech’s dining halls initiated a trayless system. The Institute’s inaugural football game day recycling program collected nearly 12 tons of aluminum cans and glass and plastic bottles from home game attendees. In 2008, Georgia Tech's urban campus was recognized as a Tree Campus USA by the Arbor Day Foundation.

Harvard College (Cambridge, MA)

Curriculum: This school offers students opportunities to study sustainability and conduct academic research on the environment. Harvard is dedicated to confronting the challenges of climate change and global sustainability through academic research

Campus: Harvard translates their research into action on campus. The school’s goal is to reduce emissions 30% below a 2006 baseline by 2016. These commitments are administered through the Harvard Office for Sustainability. Harvard now has 62 building projects in process toward achieving LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification, a 55% recycling rate, renewable energy projects on campus, composting in residential and commercial dining halls, organic landscaping in Harvard Yard, and a drive-alone rate of only 16.5%, to name just a few examples.

Northeastern University (Boston, MA)

Curriculum: Northeastern offers degree programs in Environmental Studies as well as green MBA's. They also focus on sustainable technology and green health care. The college's intent is to offer a rich variety of sustainability programming to meet the interests of their students. Sustainability programming is already in place in many units and they anticipate that it will increase as they hire additional faculty with sustainability-based research interests.

Campus: This school has integrated energy conservation into its facilities management plans since the 1980s. Most recently, the school replaced 70,000 traditional lamps with fluorescent lamps that will reduce carbon emissions by 686 tons annually. International Village, Northeastern’s new mixed-use dorm/office building, will be submitted for LEED Gold certification. Once certified, International Village will be the largest residence hall in the United States to meet this standard of sustainability. Additionally, International Village is working with a national non-profit to improve the environmental impact of its dining hall. As a result of “Project Clean Plate”, an aggressive food composting initiative, approximately 594 tons of dining hall service and catering food waste was composted in 2008. This numbers is expected to increase dramatically in 2009. Northeastern's recycling program started over 20 years ago and has expanded to include thirteen different categories of collected items, including asphalt and construction materials.

Northland College (Ashland, WI)

Curriculum: Northland built a commitment to green into the curriculum almost 40 years ago. They offer everything from Sustainable Business to Sustainable Agriculture.

Campus: This school’s environmentally-conscious residence hall, the McLean Environmental Living and Learning Center, was a model of excellence for green building before LEED existed. The college has committed to obtaining LEED Silver certification on all new buildings on campus. Northland has two wind towers, numerous solar panels, geothermal heat in the campus center and library, and furniture made from recycled materials. Students have even built a campus building that is entirely off the grid, using locally-produced materials. Northland’s dining services is a model of green eating. It offers sustainably-harvested seafood, organic and fair trade options, free-range meat, and plenty of non-meat options. Dining services provides each student with a free mug, and offers drink discounts when they reuse it.

State University of New York at Binghamton

Curriculum: This University has established innovative and creative opportunities both inside and outside the classroom to engage and educate students in ‘going green.’

Campus: The Binghamton campus encompasses almost 900 acres of land, of which a large proportion is undeveloped and in its natural state. The core of this undeveloped land is officially designated the Nature Preserve, and includes hiking trails and a 20 acre wetland. Each year approximately 2,500 pounds of compostable waste is collected around campus. Binghamton either recycles or composts more than 90 percent of its current service ware. An energy conservation contest pits residential communities against one another to see who can reduce energy consumption the most over a nine-week period. The 2009 contest resulted in a 7.5 percent overall reduction in electricity consumption.

Unity College (Unity, ME)

Curriculum: Also known as America’s Environmental College, Unity offers unique green majors like Sustainability Design and Technology, and Adventure Education Leadership, as well as more traditional offerings like Ecology and Marine Biology.

Campus: Unity derives 100 percent of its energy from renewable energy sources, all of its grounds are maintained organically, and it uses only Green Seal-certified cleaning products. The university’s location on 225 wooded acres of farmland with plenty of diverse ecosystems, including a peat bog and a pond, provides students with experiential learning opportunities. Unity’s Center for Environmental Education teaches students how to become effective environmental educators, and the career services office offers over 80 environmental internships each year. University administrators serve as role models for the eco-conscious student body. The president and his wife live on campus in the Unity House, which is built from local wood and recycled building materials. The house uses solar energy for electricity and hot water, and has zero net-energy consumption and carbon emissions.

University of California–Berkeley

Curriculum: Berkeley has more than 80 academic degrees, 90 research centers, and 25 student-run organizations with an environmental focus.

Campus: Student projects have reduced energy consumption by over 8.5 million kWh and water usage by 3 million gallons at UC Berkeley. The school publicly reports its sustainability metrics each year and has pledged to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2014 (six year sooner than the rest of California). To meet this target the campus will complete over 200 energy efficiency projects. The university’s primary food service operator was the first in the country to receive organic certification, and organic salad bars are now a staple at campus dining facilities.

University of California–Santa Barbara

Curriculum: At UCSB, students have many opportunities to study sustainability through the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, and the Academic Senate is currently working on a sustainability general education requirement for all undergraduates.

Campus: UCSB's sustainability goals are ambitious: to reduce emissions to 1990 levels by 2020 and to be carbon neutral by 2050. Home to the most LEED-certified buildings in the UC system (six), all new construction at UCSB must meet LEED Silver standards. Through HVAC and lighting retrofits, delamping, and campaigns like “Flex Your Power,” the campus has decreased its electrical consumption by 31 percent and its natural gas consumption by 23 percent since 1998. UCSB’s Custodial Services department uses only Green Seal-certified products, and its Housing and Residential Services department heads an extensive waste reduction program that includes recycling used cooking oil for biofuel, composting food waste, and purchasing local and/or organic foods.

University of California–Santa Cruz

Curriculum: UCSC strives to integrate sustainability into every aspect of research and teaching. They offer degrees in Environmental Studies and they have a Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems. A new, year-long sustainability internship program offers hands-on approach to sustainability.

Campus: The EPA ranks the UCSC campus among the top ten green power purchasing colleges, and faculty and students have won a number of awards for specific sustainability-focused projects and research. The campus boasts a 70 percent waste diversion rate and gets 20 percent of its energy from renewable sources. UCSC’s Sustainability Office is building a database of project ideas submitted by students, faculty, and staff to improve sustainable practices on campus.

University of Georgia (Athens, GA)

Curriculum: More than 100 members of the UGA faculty have joined together to create the Academy of the Environment, “a venue for cross-disciplinary collaboration in research, graduate and undergraduate training, and public education and outreach.” UGA is home to the Eugene Odum School of Ecology, and students and faculty from a variety of academic departments conduct research related to environmental issues—engineering students conduct energy audits on campus buildings, students in the College of Journalism and Mass Communication look for ways to promote energy conservation and recycling, and students in the River Basin Science and Policy Center research water quality in area streams.

Campus: The school has taken aggressive steps to conserve water on campus, such as installing rain gardens, planting native species, installing low-flow toilets and showerheads, recycling water in research labs, and even limiting flushes in stadium bathrooms during football games. The result of this “Every Drop Counts” campaign is that water use on campus is down 30 percent.

University of Maine (Orono, ME)

Curriculum: UM’s new student orientation includes sustainability programming, they offer degrees like a BS in Agriculture Food and Sustainability and have a Center for Rural Sustainable Development.

Campus: UM's campus provides free bicycles to be used by faculty, staff, students, and even visitors not affiliated with the school. Old bikes are donated by members of the community, refurbished by student groups, and placed around campus. A free shuttle also takes students from campus to downtown Orono. UM has a full-time Sustainability Coordinator as well as a Sustainability Council made up of students, faculty and staff. Under their guidance, the university has made a commitment to avoid sprawl, restore local habitats, and achieve carbon neutrality by 2040. Eco Reps in residence halls coordinate recycling programs and lead other environmental initiatives. UM recycles over 500 tons of paper products per year, and every office and classroom has at least one paper-recycling bin. All new buildings on campus must meet LEED Silver standards, and existing buildings are going green—two are already outfitted with residential-scale solar thermal systems.

University of Maryland, College Park

Curriculum: The University of Maryland offers environmentally oriented majors and minors, living & learning programs and research. Graduate level sustainability studies at this school include, Environmental Science and Technology, Sustainable Development and Conservation Biology (CONS), Theatre (THET), Toxicology (TOXI).

Campus: The University of Maryland's recycling rate increased from 17 percent in 2003 to an impressive 50 percent in 2008. The Career Center hosts an annual Green Jobs Fair to help students incorporate sustainability into their career plans. In October 2009, the university was named “America’s Greenest Campus” by Climate Culture for having the largest number of campus community members register to calculate their carbon footprint. A new University Sustainability Council is spearheading new green efforts on campus, including a commitment to LEED Silver standards for new buildings, energy-conserving renovations, a green roof, low-flow faucets, toilets, and showerheads in dorms, water- and energy-efficient dishwashers used by dining services, a composting program, discontinued use of styrofoam containers in favor of biodegradable ones, and use of water-conserving grass on the university’s golf course.

Warren Wilson College (Asheville, NC)

Curriculum: The college has six different concentrations and a new cross-disciplinary sustainability curriculum.

Campus: Warren Wilson College was one of the first in the country to institute on-campus recycling in the 1980s. Much of the food served by the school’s dining halls comes from an on-campus farm and garden. An Environmental Leadership Center provides sustainability-focused events and opportunities for both students and the local community, including a regular radio program broadcast on Asheville’s WPVM. Among the residence halls on campus is the LEED Platinum EcoDorm built by student teams with wood that was repurposed or sustainably harvested on campus. The dorm also features solar panel window awnings, compost toilets, a rainwater catchment system that helps irrigate the adjacent garden, and many other waste-minimizing features.

West Virginia University (Morgantown, WV)

Curriculum: This university is a national leader in energy research. Over the past four years, 100 faculty members have completed $98 million worth of energy-related research in everything from enhanced fuel cell production to textile recycling. WVU’s Center for Alternative Fuels, Engines and Emissions (CAFEE) is working on new technology to reduce exhaust emissions and dependence on imported oil.

Campus: WVU’s trayless dining initiative has reduced waste in dining halls by 42 percent. Excess food is donated to charities, and used cooking oil is sent to a biodiesel processor. WVU promotes student involvement in campus sustainability through events like Ecolympics, a competition between residence halls to conserve the most energy and recycle the most waste. Last year, the two winning buildings reduced energy consumption by 20 percent and recycled more than 2500 pounds of waste.

Yale University (New Haven, CT)

Curriculum: Yale is conducting leading research on climate change and other environmental issues, and educating the environmental leaders of tomorrow in its college, graduate and professional schools. The Yale Sustainable Food Project directs a sustainable dining program, manages an organic farm and runs diverse educational programs. Several undergraduate organizations also seek to educate students in environmentally responsible practices.

Campus: Yale has a comprehensive campus sustainability plan in place, highlighted by a commitment to reduce its greenhouse gas. Yale has implemented solar and wind projects to provide renewable energy. It also has its own co-generation power plant and is building another. Kroon Hall, the new home of its school of Forestry & Environmental Studies is a model of energy-saving design and is expected to earn a LEED Platinum certification.
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