Sierra Magazine Ranks UCSB among Top 10 of America’s Greenest Universities


The following press release is from Sierra magazine, dated August 14, 2013 and titled “Sierra Magazine Reveals 2013 Rankings of America’s Greenest Universities: Colleges recognized for sustainable operations and shaping future environmental citizens, workers, and leaders”:

Today, Sierra magazine released its seventh annual ranking of the nation’s “Coolest Schools,” a salute to U.S. colleges that are helping to solve climate problems and making significant efforts to operate sustainably.

Sierra examined the academic institutions making a difference for the planet, seeking out campuses that are creating tangible change in all categories of greenness – from what’s served in dining halls to what’s taught in lecture halls to what’s powering the dorms. Whether it’s Cornell’s minor in climate change or American University’s new campus-wide composting program, schools across America are taking dramatic steps to help protect the planet and its resources.

“For the past seven years, Sierra magazine has ranked colleges and universities on their commitment to fighting climate disruption and making sure the future their students will inhabit has safe water, clean air and beautiful landscapes,” said Bob Sipchen, Sierra magazine’s editor-in-chief. “By showing such strong leadership on so many fronts — from energy use and transportation to the courses they offer — the best of these schools are pointing the way for other institutions.”

Sierra magazine’s top 10 schools of 2013 are: 1.) University of Connecticut (Storrs, CT), 2.) Dickinson College (Carlisle, PA), 3.) University of California, Irvine (Irvine, CA), 4.) University of California, Davis (Davis, CA), 5.) Cornell University (Ithaca, NY), 6.) Green Mountain College (Poultney, VT), 7.) Stanford University (Stanford, CA), 8.) Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, GA), 9.) American University (Washington, DC), and 10.) University of California, Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, CA).

The University of Connecticut, Sierra’s number-one school, stands out for offering more than 600 sustainability-related classes; for having reduced its water use by 15% since 2005; and for, over the past two years, having retrofitted 13 buildings to prevent emitting 2,640 annual tons of carbon dioxide. In addition, more than a quarter of the food served in dining halls is processed within 100 miles, with many ingredients harvested right on campus. UConn’s first appearance on Sierra magazine’s “Coolest Schools” list was in 2010, at number 49.

In addition to featuring Sierra’s data-based rankings, the magazine’s September/October issue includes an array of stories that examine whether colleges’ sustainability efforts really make a difference when students graduate. Such pieces include “Aha Moments,” which profiles three people whose lives were forever changed for the greener because of a moment (or a person) in college and “The Measure of an Education,” by Pulitzer winner Edward Humes, in which readers learn how schools are starting to gauge whether steeping students in environmentalism truly does create a more sustainable world.

Exclusively online is a video made by the Sierra Club’s “Best Interns,” sent on assignment to document the behind-the-scenes goings on of the Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon, a biannual contest during which students build futuristic solar-powered houses. Also available online is a list of the most coveted eco-scholarships, plus Sierra’s annual “20 Days of Giveaways” sweepstakes. The complete rankings, along with this year’s coverage of higher education’s environmental efforts, are online at www.sierraclub.org/coolschools.

About Sierra magazine: Sierra is the official publication of the Sierra Club, America’s largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization, with more than 2.1 million members and supporters nationwide. The Sierra Club works to safeguard the health of our communities, protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining wild places through grassroots activism, public education, lobbying, and litigation. For more information, please visit www.sierramagazine.com.

Editor’s note: Kudos and special thanks to Mo Lovegreen, Executive Officer of the Department of Geography and Director of Campus Sustainability, and Katie Maynard, Campus Event Manager and Sustainability Coordinator, for their prodigious efforts towards the greening of UCSB!

 

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Cover art for the current issue of Sierra magazine

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Infographic on how America’s most sustainable campuses are shaping the future (source: Sierra magazine)

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UCSB puts up formidable numbers: 44 of its buildings are LEED certified, 47% of academic departments offer a class about sustainability (for a total of 321 classes and 217 faculty members who do eco-research), 50% of food served is local, and 75% of waste gets saved from the landfill via recycling and composting; the goal is to get that latter percentage to 100 by 2020. The Gauchos have also, since the late 1990s, lowered their electricity use by a third (10 on-campus photovoltaic systems help), their water use by a quarter, and their food waste by almost 35%. A whopping 94% of students take alternative means of transit to class—there are more than 10,000 bicycle parking spaces on campus to accommodate 10 miles of bike paths (Ibid.; photo courtesy of Jonas Krant/UCSB)

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“Treat the earth well: it was not given to you by your parents, it was loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the Earth from our Ancestors, we borrow it from our Children.” Ancient Indian Proverb

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