CLEANER, GREENER U.
Students are driving the campus climate movement, fighting Big Coal and putting legislators on notice
By Brita Belli
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Climate
change is our generation’s civil rights movement,” says Brianna Cayo
Cotter, communications director for the Energy Action Coalition,
swilling from a tall cup of coffee. Cotter talked fast and raked her
fingers through her thick, wavy hair, staring intently, as though she’d
been on a steady diet of nothing but caffeine for the last few days.
This was PowerShift 2007, held at the University of Maryland, the
largest gathering of college students ever assembled to fight climate
change, a weekend of non-stop workshops and speakers and rallies
brought together by Energy Action staff. The previous week, the group’s
server had crashed as college students across the nation logged on to
register. On Halloween night, they hit 5,500 registrants, sending up a
cheer in Energy Action offices. Cotter was literally buzzing with
enthusiasm. “We’re at a crucial moment in history,” she said. “Climate
change is an issue that’s already impacting us, from the destruction of
the Appalachian Mountains to the wildfires in California. We get that
the resource wars and super storms are connected. And we get that the
steps taken today will end up being the future for tomorrow.”
Shifting the Power
Surrounded by foldout tables topped with organic T-shirts, cloth bags,
environmental magazines and activist pamphlets, the Energy Action crew
had created its own environmental how-to Mecca. Students roamed the
halls clutching containers of coffee and complementary tote bags,
migrating to one of hundreds of workshops that happened simultaneously
and around the clock across the UM campus, on everything from radical
lobbying to art and activism to communicating a winning message and
running an energy-efficiency campaign in your house of worship.
The
workshops were followed by the largest youth lobbying effort ever
assembled in Washington to stop global warming. In addition to more
than 300 individual meetings with Congressional leaders, youth climate
spokesperson Billy Parish, cofounder of the Energy Action Coalition,
was one of several environmentalists who testified before the House
Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming. The hearing
had some 2,000 people in attendance. It was followed by a boisterous
rally outside on the lawn.
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| ASU's Global Institute for Sustainability |
“We’re saying to these leaders, ‘You’ve got a year to show action, to
give us a climate bill,’” says Sean Miller, an Energy Action Coalition
representative and director of education for Earth Day Network. “We’re
targeting members of Congress who don’t meet our needs.”
By all accounts, the youth voices were heard over that long weekend,
strategically timed a year before the 2008 Presidential elections.
Congressman Edward Markey (D-MA), chair of the House Select Committee,
and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) gave the students a
platform and spoke before the Saturday night conference. Congresswoman
Lucille Roybal-Allard (C-CA) spent the better part of an hour talking
about pollution issues with Los Angeles teacher Andrew Stephens and his
“Mean Green Team” high school students, many of whom had just flown in
on the first plane rides of their lives.
And the momentum, fanned in large part by college students, is carrying
global warming from the sleeper issue it was in the 2006 midterm
elections to a defining campaign talking point. In May, energy
independence and global warming trailed only health care as America’s
most important domestic challenge, according to Democratic pollster
Stan Greenberg. And by last October, the only issue appearing more than
global warming in campaign ads was the Iraq war.
Back in Maryland, the Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) New Voters
Project set up shop in a Powershift lobby, with life-sized cardboard
cutouts of the candidates so young voters could take digital pictures
while holding aloft word balloons reading, “What’s Your Plan?” in
reference to global warming solutions.
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| Ryan Carle of UC Santa Cruz on a coastal bluff he is helping to restore. |
“This
is how democracy works,” says New Voters Project Director Ellynne
Bannon, who says PIRG advocates a non-partisan, peer-to-peer method of
civic engagement. In 2004, a year after the program’s launch, the group
registered more than a half million new voters, and those numbers have
grown with each election year. “We hope it makes candidates realize
it’s worth it to go to campuses and not just appear on [online social
networking site] Facebook,” Bannon says.
Campus sustainability initiatives—from local food in cafeterias (see
sidebar), to renewable energy courses, to wind and solar
installations—are multiplying fast. Schools are polishing their green
credentials in an effort to outshine other schools, and they are
swapping success stories online and in person.
At press time, 458 school presidents had signed the American College
and University President’s Climate Commitment, which requires schools
to have a plan to go carbon neutral within two years of signing. Nina
Rizzo, the California Freedom from Oil campus organizer for Global
Exchange, is encouraged by the progress students are making, and the
university system in California is a leader in environmental
initiatives from LEED-certified buildings to bicycle lanes, but she has
yet to see “radical action” that parallels the civil rights struggles
of the 1960s. “The movement is potent, but we’re not there yet,” Rizzo
says. “I don’t think people are angry enough yet.”
Michael M’Gonigle, author of Planet U, a professor of environmental law
and policy at the University of Victoria and a co-founder of Greenpeace
International, agrees that the incremental changes he’s seeing on
campuses have yet to resemble the sustained force of 1960s radicalism.
“Certainly in the states, it’s not in the public consciousness that
there is this movement,” says M’Gonigle. “But the anxiety about climate
change is really palpable—students feel it. And there’s an overarching
social anxiety, something we have to act on. It’s not like stopping the
deployment of anti-ballistic missiles in Europe. It’s local. We can do
something right here and right now at this institution.”
Remaking a Campus
Outside
the stately brick UM building that served as the conference’s main hub,
three students from Florida Atlantic University relaxed on the grass,
passing time between workshops. As students at a beachfront school,
they see the realities of global warming outside their dorm windows in
the eroding sand and freakish storms. Nicole Henken, a freshman, says,
“Beaches around us are having to ship in sand because it’s so washed
out from rain and storm activity.”
“They dredge it from the ocean and put it on the beach,” adds Veronica
LaFranchise, another freshman, who hopes to major in marine biology and
work on removing trash from the nation’s waterways.
The three say that although Al Gore’s documentary, An Inconvenient
Truth, didn’t inspire them to fight climate change, it reinforced their
understanding of an environment gone wrong. “Al Gore made it accessible
to people,” says sophomore Jen Cohen, who showed the film to her less
environmentally aware mom. “You’re not a crazy hippie if you believe in
global warming.”
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| At Powershift 2007, college students from across the nation rallied at the Capitol to demand climate legislation. |
Students are beginning to feel their collective power, and they are
pushing for immediate changes in the way their colleges and
universities operate. They see their campuses as perfect microcosms for
society at large, places where they can change everything from basic
policies to education directions to how energy is purchased and
recycling handled. They can then take these lessons out into the world
at large.
“All
the power dynamics are there on a campus,” says 26-year-old Matt Stern,
campus organizer with the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. “The
constituencies and organizing potential are concentrated. It’s a great
learning ground for students.”
Stern’s group deals with a regional coalition of 10 schools in Virginia
and Maryland, focusing on specific campaigns. Last year, they rallied
hundreds of students to pressure administrators at Johns Hopkins
University to sign the president’s climate commitment. While many
larger schools are shying away from the agreement and opting to write
their own policies, says Stern, the formal commitment has teeth. “We
focus on institutional policies,” he says, “for buses to run on
biodiesel or for zero-percent carbon emissions.”
Judy Walton, acting executive director of the Association for the
Advancement of Sustainability in Highter Education (AASHE), says
student activism has been critical in getting schools to look at their
greenhouse gas emissions and find solutions. “Student action is one of
the driving forces on many campuses,” Walton says. “There are a few
cases where the administration took the lead, but that’s rare.”
Beyond the Campus Confines
“I
was a student at Penn State,” says Maura Cowley, now the national
campaign director for the Sierra Student Coalition. “And when [the
college] bought five percent wind energy, we changed the market price
in Pennsylvania....We changed the price of wind power and changed the
whole dynamic and evolution of the state’s energy.”
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| Vincente Rosa of Earth Club at James Madison University. |
According
to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) “Green Power Partnership”
rankings, Penn State now ranks third among schools for green power
purchasing, with 20 percent of its total electricity use coming from
wind power. Its fellow state school, the University of Pennsylvania,
has seen the light on green energy, too, and is now second, at 29
percent. New York University is number one, with an incredible 100
percent of its electricity use coming from wind power.
“It’s surprising how important colleges and universities are as
regional players,” says M’Gonigle. “Any town of 50,000 or more has a
college. Take out the college and it’s like cutting off a limb. They
are big corporations with economic clout.”
When
students decide to get active on regional issues, they have the power
to force attention on environmental issues, and even change the course
of local policy. A coalition of students in Virginia has teamed up to
fight a new Dominion “clean coal” plant in Wise County, Virginia. The
plant is slated for construction on a former surface coal mine site,
and the students are arguing for clean energy instead. “No new coal”
has become a battle cry among college greens, particularly those in the
Southeast confronted with the devastation of mountaintop removal
mining, which leads to polluted water, filthy air and land stripped of
life.
“We are working together with many other individuals and grassroots
organizations to send a message to the energy corporations that we
don’t want any new coal plants,” says Ryan Hasty, a junior at Emory and
Henry College in southwestern Virginia, who became president of The
Greens on his campus last year. “It’s an old technology, it’s very
dirty and it isn’t worth sacrificing the health and well-being of those
who live near the mine sites and the power plants. Not to mention the
destruction of some of the cleanest and most biodiverse waterways in
the world.”
While
some of the students involved in the anti-coal campaign live in
Virginia, they hadn’t confronted the realities of mountaintop removal
mining: the eerie, denuded landscape interrupted only by polluted
headwater streams. “Before I got to James Madison University,” says
sophomore Vicente Rosa, “I didn’t know much about environmental
issues.” Once there, he joined the Earth Club, which together with such
local groups as Appalachian Voices, is educating people about coal’s
effects and working to stop new plants before they’re built. “Coal is
one of the top polluters,” says Rosa. “We’re telling Dominion we want
clean energy.”
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| Maura Cowley (left) of the Sierra Student Coalition and Brianna Cayo Cotter of the Energy Action Coalition. |
As research sites, colleges bring innovation and expertise to those
expanding clean technologies. Ten Texas universities joined forces with
government agencies and corporate partners as the Lone Star Wind
Alliance, which last June won a $2 million Department of Energy grant
for a large-scale wind-turbine and blade-testing facility. Oil giant BP
donated 22 acres just north of Corpus Christi for the effort. Texas
beat California to become the leading national producer of wind power
in 2006, and researchers at the University of Texas in Austin are
developing ways to overcome the variability and intermittent nature of
wind power to make it truly competitive with fossil fuels.
Arizona State University’s clean cities vision comes from the top down.
ASU President Michael Crow came to the campus from Columbia University
committed to making the university a leader in sustainability. Five
years later, the university’s Global Institute for Sustainability
pushes students and faculty to find solutions to resource depletion in
water-deprived, population-dense cities like Phoenix, which is a
stand-in for many cities worldwide coping with desertification (a
threat to some 20 percent of the world’s population). “We see campuses
as living labs,” says Bonny Bentzin of ASU’s Global Institute of
Sustainability. “In Phoenix, we’re on the frontline as one the
fastest-growing communities in the U.S. We have to figure out how not
only how to have a sustainable water supply, but how to manage air
quality.”
Book Learning
There
are changes underway inside the classrooms, too. Duke University has a
new Energy and Environment track (combining business and environmental
management) that prepares students to remake their worlds in concrete
ways. Erika Lovelace of Duke’s Office of Enrollment says, “The degree
prepares you to come up with sustainable ideas to assist local
communities.”
At the University of Colorado in Boulder, 22-year-old environmental
studies major Paul Chase says working environmental education into the
broader curriculum is a major campus goal. He’s the only student
undergrad represented on the Chancellor’s Committee on Energy,
Environment and Sustainability. Making the sprawling university the
first of its size to go climate neutral (tentatively scheduled for
2060) is only one of many of the committee’s goals.
Chase talks about changing the core curriculum at Boulder, calling it
“a huge undertaking, which involves expanding environmental education
into all aspects of the university and to every student.”
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| Matt Stern, campus organizer with the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. |
For some students, reforming the course offerings isn’t splashy enough.
Whether launching a recycling program or passing out petitions for
clean energy purchases, they want to see changes made now. “It’s a
challenge to balance long-term goals with the students that want to see
immediate returns,” says Bentzin.
Students are looking for the kind of impact made by the University of
California’s solar energy commitment in 2003, which involved installing
10 megawatts of renewable energy (equivalent to power used by 5,000
homes) across UC’s 10 campuses. The schools also pledged to purchase 20
percent of their electricity from clean energy sources by 2017 (enough
to power 26,000 homes). UC Santa Cruz is going far beyond that,
pledging to purchase 100 percent renewable energy for its campus.
Such strides helped motivate students at other colleges, such as the
University of Colorado in Denver, which was inspired to build the
fifth-largest campus solar project. Corey Nadler, a campus organizer
with the Colorado Public Interest Research Group (CoPIRG), spoke before
a rapt audience in one Powershift workshop, describing his school’s
solar victory. The activists gathered 2,000 student signatures, gained
administrative support, and then, says the curly-haired spokesperson,
“The public utilities commission threatened to veto the project.” So
students got the media involved and won their case. It was a huge
effort just to offset three and half percent of the school’s energy
output to solar. But the students had made visible strides, with
rooftop solar panels as proof of their victory.
Greener than U.
This
is a race not only against the inevitable march of climate change, but
against other colleges and universities eager to tout their green
accomplishments. A school without a sustainability office seems
hopelessly outdated, a passive part of the old economy instead of a
vital part of the new. Signing climate commitments, university
presidents are bestowed an immediate badge of honor, one that shows
they know the importance of their place in the new world.
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| College
of the Atlantic's newest dorms (above) will save energy through super
insulation and heat by wood pellets, radiant in-floor systems and
hydronic forced air. |
“We’re really pushing to become a leader, a model, of how a large
university becomes carbon neutral,” says Chase at the University of
Colorado, Boulder. “It’s vital to have that competition. And it’s a
great thing when you’re competing for the right reasons, to be the
cleanest, not the richest, school.”
Some
schools have already attained “green cred” through their single-minded
focus on sustainability, an easier feat at a small, liberal arts
school. Middlebury College in Vermont offers the complete package, from
its natural landscape design to its fully composted dining hall waste
to its “yellow bike” borrowing system for on-campus commutes. The
school’s $11 million biomass facility is scheduled to open in late
fall, with the capacity to burn enough wood chips to displace the use
of $1 million gallons of fuel oil, cutting the school’s fuel needs in
half. And it’s a gasification system, turning wood to gas that’s then
burned, reducing the amount of sulphur oxide and nitrous oxide in the
emissions. The school’s existing power plant is already a cogeneration
system, heating the campus with steam, but the biomass facility will
take Middlebury’s sustainability commitment to the next level. Jack
Byrne, Middlebury’s campus sustainability coordinator, says the biomass
facility is one part of the big picture vision at the college.
“More than likely, wood and biomass will become an increasingly
sought-after source of energy,” says Byrne. In years to come,
Middlebury may be able to bypass wood altogether in favor of growing
its own willow shrubs. School officials traveled to the State
University of New York’s School of Forestry to learn about how willow
(a hardy perennial that requires minimal fertilizer and pesticides to
grow) can be used as a fuel source. The school has a 10-acre test plot
underway.
All of this is helping Middlebury reach one of the most ambitious goals
any college has set: carbon neutrality by 2016. “It’s not an easy
goal,” Byrne admits, but students have been relentless on the issue.
“The general approach is renewables, conservation and efficiency,”
Byrne says, “and, as a last resort, carbon offsets.”
Minnesota’s Carleton College is another small liberal arts school with
green might, installing its own wind turbine on campus, engaging in
“dorm wars” to encourage low energy use, and committing to green
building retrofits and composting all food waste. The college’s
1.65-megawatt wind turbine is the first utility-grade installation by a
college. Mathias Bell, an environmental associate, says the turbine has
become a powerful force on campus. “It’s a looming presence,” Bell
says, “and it’s an incredible educational tool.”
A similarly focused school, Maine’s College of the Atlantic, has
achieved near perfection in its student-led green pursuits, eliminating
or offsetting all its greenhouse gas emissions, supporting on-campus
watershed preservation and following the highest standards of green
building in all new campus structures.
Really the Best?
Not
surprisingly, the media is surfing the wave with lists of “10 Coolest
Schools” (Sierra Magazine) or “15 Green Colleges and Universities”
(Grist) and “50 Green Colleges” (Kiwi Magazine). Most attempt to rank
schools based on a nebulous collection of green attributes, including
food served, classes taught, buildings built and transportation
supported. Rather than pointing out the positive heights colleges and
universities are reaching, these lists tend to create a furor among
schools that were left out.
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| Nina Rizzo (above) - California Freedom from Oil campus organizer. |
AASHE has developed the Sustainability, Tracking, Assessment and Rating
System (STARS) to serve as a guideline for measuring schools based on a
wide range of green credentials. “People are angry about those lists,”
says Walton, “They’re often meaningless and there’s a lack of
transparency.”
The
STARS assessment will function like the LEED rating system for
buildings, relying on schools to submit documentation proving their
“green” merits. That information will be made available to the public
online. Initially, STARS will not be third-party verified.
For the past two years, the Sustainable Endowments Institute has had a
separate rating system, looking at the 200 public and private
universities with the highest endowments, and giving them grades based
on shareholder engagement and endowment transparency as well as on food
and recycling, green building and other typical green benchmarks. While
their statistics show that campus initiatives are growing, with nearly
45 percent of schools committed to fight climate change, endowments to
sustainable causes have not kept pace.
But it is not only in making physical retrofits, purchasing wind power
and adding bike lanes that these schools do the essential work of
curing the nation’s fossil-fuel dependency. It is in educating students
about the importance of creating and supporting a new green economy and
turning out leaders. In that respect, the campus sustainability
movement has been a resounding success.
“We really see our futures at stake,” says Stern. “We have to nail this problem. Everything else is negated.”