Green Campuses

Jenna Fisher at the Utne Reader has a guide to green campuses. This helps with an earlier post I'd added last Fall about campus sustainability, which in turn is a continuation of the conversation on consumption patterns.

Quoth Utne.com:

In recent years, college and university campuses have proven crucial leaders in the movement to make large-scale, resource-demanding institutions more environmentally friendly. Many have implemented projects that promote alternative energies, energy efficiency, and environmental sustainability. But not everyone's jumped on the eco-bandwagon. So who's doing what?

The guide then reviews links to the following sorts of questions:

  1. Does the college make the sustainability grade?
  2. Is the campus vegetarian friendly?
  3. Does the cafeteria food come shipped in from miles away or is it grown locally?
  4. How effective are college activist groups?

And here is The Sustainable Endowments Institute's recent College Sustainability Report Card. It "grades 100 leading colleges by looking at campus greening practices and endowment policies."

For the record:
The University of Virginia, for example, got a "D+".

Dave's University of British Columbia got a "B-".

Oberlin College actually got a "C+," despite David Orr's work there. (Orr has been a speaker in Dave's Global Citizenship Series at UBC, which is why I picked that one out of the 98 others to show here.)

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Wow - only C+ for Oberlin! I guess only their famouos house is eco-friendly and the rest of campus is not. I heard Orr speak once and it is a life-changing experience.