Blueprint for a Green Campus (2003 Update)
Table of Contents | Summary | Climate-Friendly Campus | Growing Without Increasing Traffic | Safe/Healthy Campus | Consumption and Disposal Habits | 2002 Blueprint Update | 2001 Blueprint Update | Original Blueprint
Summary
In April of 2000, the University of Colorado Environmental
Center released the Blueprint for a Green Campus. To quote the
introduction to the Blueprint:
"Building on the environmental successes
at CU over the last two decades, we propose a vision of a growing,
dynamic campus which steps lightly upon the earth and satisfies
additional demands for energy, transportation, and resources
through increased efficiency rather than increased consumption."
The Blueprint
lays out challenging goals in the areas of climate change, transportation,
health and safety, and disposal and consumption habits. The 2001
Update to the Blueprint for a Green Campus was released in 2001,
and the 2002 Update was released last spring as a check-in on
the Blueprint. This document seeks to answer questions on support
for
the Blueprint goals, what progress has been made, obstacles to
progress, and newly emerging issues.
The major campus departments
have reported on their progress on working toward the goals
set forth in the Blueprint. Information from the departments is
incorporated
throughout this document. The complete reports as submitted
by Facilities Management, Housing, UCSU, Environmental Health and
Safety, and Parking and
Transit Services are available online.
The Blueprint has been
formally endorsed by two major campus bodies: the University
of Colorado Student Union and the Boulder Faculty Assembly.
The Blueprint
was also recognized by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency, which issued a Year 2000 Climate Protection Award
to the Environmental Center for the creation of the Blueprint.
The
Chancellor's
Executive Committee reviewed the Blueprint for a Green
Campus in spring 2000, and set up a Blueprint Committee, chaired
by
the
vice
chancellor for administration. The committee has now been
replaced by a standing Campus Environmental Council. In 2003,
the Boulder
Faculty Assembly also created a subcommittee on the environment.
Progress during 2002-2003
There are several initiatives worth reporting on.
Institutional and Structural Issues:
The 2002 Blueprint Update described the debate surrounding
the creation of a campus environmental council, and included a
resolution by
the Environmental Board supporting the creation of a council.
In
fall
of 2002, the vice chancellors agreed to create such a council.
In January 2003 the council began meeting. The charge and
membership of the council are included as an appendix to this document
and
can also be viewed here.
Last year's update also discussed the move toward paid printing in campus computer
labs as a step towards greening the campus marketplace. This is continuing
to move forward, with implementation expected for fall semester of 2003. One
new
aspect is that Imaging Services has agreed to switch to the highest percentage
of post-consumer recycled content paper that is compatible with the equipment.
The experience to date has indicated that a 100% post-consumer content
recycled paper will work. This will reinforce the environmental benefits of the
switch
from "free" printing to paid printing.
Another area that is in play in
the realm of greening the campus marketplace is parking pricing. As
part of the planning
process for up to 1900 beds of new student housing at Williams Village,
the city and the campus agreed to jointly sponsor a transportation
and parking study.
The study, conducted by Nelson/Nygaard associates, compared a number
of scenarios, largely distinguished by the amount and price of
parking. One
of the key questions
is whether the cost of parking should be subsidized by rents, or whether
the costs should be born only by those who choose to have a car. If
car owners bear
the full cost, the rates that must be charged are high enough to significantly
dampen demand. At the high end of the range, 4 parking structures housing
up to 2200 cars would be built; at the low end only one parking structure
would
be constructed. (http://fm.colorado.edu/planning/bcpc/)
An interesting
exercise was the 2003 student environmental survey. In April 2003
the UCSU Environmental
Center contracted Aspen Media and Marketing to conduct a phone survey
of 300 randomly chosen, full-time CU-Boulder students to gauge
the current
level of
environmental concern at the university. Of the students surveyed,
86 percent believed that it is either very important or somewhat
important that CU
is a leader in campus environmental management.
Survey results indicate
that students
believe that the university should expand its use of renewable energy;
use recycled or tree-free paper; eliminate the use of chemical pesticides
on campus lawns;
and offer organic food in campus dining halls.
- 92% of the student body
supports a $2.00 student fee increase to fund 100% wind generated
electricity for the
three student controlled buildings � the UMC student union,
the Recreation Center, and the Wardenburg Health Center
- 72% of residence hall students
would support a $10/month rent increase in order to purchase
wind energy for the residence
halls
- 74% of students are opposed to spraying pesticides on campus
lawns to control dandelions.
- 75% of students believe campus food service should
offer organic options; 40% would be willing to pay 20 percent
more for organic food.
- 63%
of students strongly or somewhat supported the upcoming switch
to paid printing in campus computer labs to reduce paper waste.
The survey results
can be viewed
online.
Some interesting developments in the individual goal areas include:
Creating a Climate-Friendly Campus: One major structural change
was the creation
of the campus energy officer position. This has allowed a renewed
institutional focus
on energy and resource conservation, as a level not seen since
the late 1970s 'energy
crisis." An outside force � high natural gas prices � has also created
a strong financial incentive for investment in energy efficiency. The energy
section of
this document will describe some of the actions in this arena.
For the
first time in many years, the trend of increased energy consumption
per square foot
of building area seems to be turning around. The combination of
individual response to the generation green energy education campaign, "de-lamping" of
campus buildings, and lighting upgrades appears to be having a
measurable impact. For the first
time in 10 years, energy and water usage declined significantly
last year. Per square foot, the CU-Boulder campus used 2.2 percent
less electricity during fiscal
year 2002-03 compared to the previous fiscal year. For the last
decade, campus energy use has risen each year by about 5 percent
per year.
One
side effect of
the high cost of natural gas is a change to the operations of the
campus cogeneration facility. In order to save money by avoiding
the use of natural
gas, CU-Boulder
is now purchasing more power from Excel Energy, and producing less
electricity. This means that our power mix is shifted in the direction
of coal, rather
than natural gas. Because of this the emissions inventory conducted
in 2000 probably
significantly undercounts our current emissions.
One major new
initiative this year was the development of a biodiesel
program on the Boulder campus.
The lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions associated with the use
of biodiesel are far lower than for use of conventional diesel
fuel. CU students voted
by a margin
of 83% to 17% to increase student fees to provide funding for this
effort. Transportation Services has teamed up with the student
effort to run all
of the diesel Buff
Buses on biodiesel � 3 on B-100 (100% biodiesel) and 10 on B-20
(20% biodiesel, 80% conventional diesel mix). Some of this is
produced
from the grease
from campus food services; most is purchased from Blue Sun Biodiesel.
Special Transit is
also now running one HOP bus on B-100, and we are in discussion
on the conversion of more of the HOP fleet; RTD has committed to
a pilot project,
where they will
fuel half of the SKIP buses with B-20; the city is fueling a number
of vehicles with B-20, Boulder Biodiesel is selling B-100 to the
public, and
Bartkus oil
has opened a public B-20 pump. CU student Andrew Azman, founder
of CU biodiesel, is receiving a Brower Youth award for this effort
(1,
2).
On the academic side, the CU-Boulder team won the national solar
decathlon. This
team of engineering
and architecture students built a remarkable demonstration solar
house, which is currently located on the Boulder campus.
Growing
Without Increasing
Traffic: In August 2002 the new STAMPEDE shuttle
linking east campus and main campus began. Student ridership has
reached approximately
17,000 rides/month,
making it the
fourth highest ridership route behind the SKIP, HOP, and B. Overall,
student ridership on RTD routes went up by 14.3%, or 177,000 trips.
Student transit
ridership by route and year may be viewed here.
The economic slowdown has affected RTD's revenues. This has led
to several significant issues, including cutbacks to bus service
and a proposal to
eliminate the Ecopass
program. However, compromises have been reached on these issues,
allowing the Boulder community transit network to continue, and
preserving the Ecopass
prpgram,
including the faculty/staff program.
In spring of 2003 a year-long
study process began, to create a transportation master plan for
the campus. This
will be the
most comprehensive look to date at both supply and demand management
options for the campus. This effort can be viewed here.
There was also significant progress this year on encouraging bicycle
use.
Parking and Transit Services, Housing, and the Environmental Center
teamed up to jointly
fund the replacement of approximately 1,000 out of date bike racks.
The University of Colorado Federal Credit Union began a new loan
program, the “Easy
Ride," which
allows CU students who are credit union members to borrow up to
$500 interest free towards the purchase of a bicycle. Finally,
the Environmental Center
and Parking and Transit Services launched a new “Buff Bikes" free
cruiser bicycle checkout program. Some information can be found
here.
Creating a Safe and Healthy Campus: Facilities Management, Housing
and
UCSU departments
are all working toward using less toxic cleaners in their custodial
operations. Facilities Management has developed a toxicity ranking
system for cleaners
and has reviewed over 200 products to date. The cumulative efforts
of all departments
could naturally evolve toward a formalized program.
CU's Integrated Pest Management (IPM) program continues to prove
its effectiveness in controlling unwanted pests with preventative
measures and with the least
toxic and most effective approaches. Chemical sprays continue to
be avoided for indoor
pest control. However, this year, an herbicide spray occurred outdoors
in an attempt to control a significant dandelion outbreak which
resulted from a moist
spring following a severe drought. Controversy followed the decision
to spray and discussions will continue in order to seek the least
toxic and
morst effective
approach to controlling broadleaf weeds.
Additionally, Environmental
Health and Safety continues to lead the campus toward responsible
hazardous waste
disposal
and reduction efforts. EH&S is implementing a new chemical inventory
management system to better track, control and respond to the thousands
of chemicals
stored and used in laboratories.
Greening Campus Consumption and
Disposal Habits: The
Environmental Center added a student position to advance environmentally
preferable purchasing strategies for CU. The Campus Environmental
Council green purchasing
subcommittee will explore opportunities for contract reform and
purchasing standards on an institutional scale. A Green Purchasing
Expo was held in
April 2003 with
vendors showing a variety of products and services geared to institutional
applications. An exciting specific accomplishment occurred with
Facilities Management converting
general fund bathrooms to 100% recycled toilet paper at equal quality
and a lower cost than the previously purchased products.
One
interesting development
on recycling
is that analysis conducted by the recycling partnership indicates
that CU has been meeting the Blueprint goal of capping solid waste
going to
the landfill
at year 2000 levels. Initial findings suggest that the combination
of recycling, composting, and other waste reduction efforts appear
to be containing the
amount of waste that is landfilled. The chart at right shows a
gradual reduction in
trash dumpster volumes and a corresponding increase in the materials
collected through CU Recycling.
In
fall of 2002 the vice chancellors of administration
and student affairs initiated a "business plan review of recycling
activities".
This allowed a comprehensive financial analysis of recycling on
campus (which is split among multiple departmental budgets) and
a comparison to
the costs of
solid waste disposal. The analysis has shown that the net cost
for waste disposal to Facilities Management would increase by at
least $174,000 if
materials that
are currently collected for recycling were instead landfilled.
This is the first time that solid evidence has existed that recycling
has a net
positive fiscal
impact on the campus.
2002-2003 Emerging Issues
Water: The drought which hit Colorado in 2002 has had an
impact on the university. CU gets much of its irrigation water
from ditch rights from
the Boulder creek watershed, and purchases treated water from the
City of Boulder.
CU uses approximately 450 million gallons of treated water
and 85 million gallons of ditch water each year. During the summer
of 2002, Colorado suffered the most severe drought since
the
creation of the university � in fact, tree ring analysis indicates
that the last time that water levels were this low in the Boulder
Creek
watershed was the early 1700s.
In response, the city of Boulder
imposed outdoor watering restrictions, and asked for voluntary
indoor water conservation efforts. In addition, the city
is currently considering revisions to the rate structure designed
to provide
a larger financial incentive for conservation. The city currently
charges an escalating price; that is, as the amount of water
used increases, the cost/gallon also increases. The city is
considering
a proposal to make the surcharge for heavy water use larger,
and to impose additional surcharges during droughts. This will
increase
costs to CU, and may provide additional incentives to conserve.
Already, CU has responded to the drought in several ways.
First, efforts to convert fields from city water to ditch water
have been
accelerated, to minimize the use of expensive treated water
for irrigation. The Recreation Center has also developed plans
to replace
a number of fields with artificial turf, which requires no
watering, including Farrand Field, the Business field, and
fields at Williams
Village. The feasibility study can be viewed here.
CU has also taken a number of steps to reduce indoor water
use. The most significant have involved changes to campus cooling
systems.
Most cooling in campus buildings uses chilled water. In many
cases, cooling systems have used this water only once, rather
than recirculating
the water. As an example, the campus is replacing the cooling
system for the lasers at the Joint Institute for Laboratory
Astrophysics
with a new closed loop system, which will save 25 million
gallons per year. Per square foot, the CU-Boulder campus saved
11 percent
on potable water consumption compared to the previous year.
The Fiscal Impacts of Environmental Programs: The State
of Colorado
and the University of Colorado are faced with an unprecedented
fiscal crisis, with deep budget cuts affecting nearly every
state department. In this situation, can the university afford
to improve
its environmental programs and attempt to implement new initiatives
to reduce impact on the air, water, and land? A number of
examples, from this campus and others, suggest that the question
may be whether
CU can afford not to improve its environmental performance.
Right now, the evidence is suggestive, but is program specific
and anecdotal;
however, the Environmental center will conduct a more comprehensive
review of the costs and savings associated with campus environmental
programs during the 2003-2004 academic year.
The most comprehensive
study of the link between improved environmental performance
and lowered costs for campuses is a 1998 study by the National
Wildlife
Federation, published as a report titled Green Investment,
Green Return: How Practical Conservation Projects Save Millions
on America's
Campuses. This report highlights many case studies of campuses "success
at achieving the twin goals of doing the right thing for
the environment and saving money". Some of the areas where
there is the most potential for reducing costs over the long
term are in the areas of transportation,
reducing energy use, reducing waste, and recycling and composting.
Let's look at each area in turn.
Transportation: The conventional
approach to transportation at many schools has been pretty
simple: wait until complaints about parking reach a crescendo,
then build
some new parking lots and wait a few years until the demand
and complaints start to grow, then do it all over again.
This may be
why the former chancellor of the University of California
at Berkeley stated that "A university is a diverse community
held together by common complaints about parking"!
However,
there is a big financial problem with this approach. Many
schools, including CU, do not
have additional land that can be devoted to surface parking
lots. In fact, new construction often uses up land which
used to be devoted
to surface parking. The supply of surface parking decreases
as institutions convert parking lots into other uses, such
as new
research buildings, dormitories, stadiums, and theaters,
while the new uses increase parking demand. The campus is
then faced
with either acquiring new land � a very expensive proposition
and often impossible � or constructing parking structures
over existing surface lots. The capital cost of construction
is quite high �in
the range of $15,000 to $30,000 per net new parking space
Thus for 1,000 spaces a campus would be looking at $15 million
- $30
million in capital costs. Recovering this from users could
require monthly parking fees of $100 or more � much higher
than is typically charged or is politically acceptable to
the campus
community.
Are
there are other approaches to managing transportation demand
that are less expensive? In most cases where land constraints
lead to
the use of structured parking, the answer is yes. And these
approaches are better for the environment.
Cornell University
provides a great
example. In the early 1990s Cornell faced demand for
building thousands of new parking spaces. Instead, they decided
to create a new transportation
demand management program, which emphasized expanded
transit,
increased parking rates, and strong financial incentives
for carpooling.
The results were dramatic. Over a 6-year period, the
campus built only 350 new parking spaces, instead of the 3100
spaces that would
have otherwise been required. After subtracting out the
cost of the program, the total savings over these six years approach
$13
million dollars. And, the program led to a 25% decline
in
the number of vehicles driven by faculty and staff to
campus.
Here
at CU,
the faculty/staff bus pass program has also been a
good investment for the campus. This program allows each permanent
faculty or staff member who is eligible for benefits to ride
local
and regional
buses and light rail by showing his or her university
ID.
Because some employees have reduced the number of times
they
drive
to campus, or stopped driving to campus, due to the
availability of free transit,
some parking spaces are freed up - a total of 350 spaces
based on an analysis by Parking and Transit Services.
The annual
cost of the bus pass program comes to $1,125 per parking
space left
open. For comparison, the annual debt service required
to provide one additional parking space by building a new parking
structure
on an existing surface lot would be more than $2,700.
Thus, it is 2.5 times as expensive to provide one additional
parking
space
compared to reducing demand by one space. The net annual
savings to campus, compared to providing 350 new spaces,
is $560,000.
An analysis in the existing conditions report for the
Transportation Master Plan produced the table above.
Energy: The bottom line: campus energy use is not cheap. Here at CU, the trend over
the last decade has been one of dramatically escalating energy
use,
with annual increases in electricity consumption hovering around
5%. The actual costs went up even faster. In the 2000-2001 fiscal
year, for example, electricity costs rose by 9.9%! Annual utilities
costs exceed $6 million. And the campus may need to invest tens
of millions of dollars in new power capacity to serve campus
growth. Are there opportunities to reduce some of these costs?
Perhaps the best example is the State University of New York.
Maybe their hard winters explain it, but SUNY Buffalo (UB) has
made energy conservation
an integral part of campus operation for twenty years now. One
comprehensive energy retrofit project alone led to a $3 million
dollar annual saving in energy cost. They estimate that over
a 15-year period, the cumulative energy cost savings were over
$60
million dollars. According to Walter Simpson, then energy officer
at UB, " Conservation and efficiency mean less strip mines, oil
fields, smog, acid rain, and global warming. Moreover, conservation
projects can be set up so that they pay for themselves. Campuses
would be crazy not to do these projects just from a financial point
of view."
Here at CU, the same approach is beginning. In response
to the big cost increases, the administration has created a new
energy officer position, partially modeled after UB, and has
ramped up funding for efforts to reduce energy use on campus. These
range
from educational campaigns designed to get students and employees
to turn off lights and computers when not in use, to major capital
investments in energy efficiency. The potential savings are huge.
According to an analysis by the energy officer, just getting
campus computer users to enable the energy saving sleep mode on
their
computer monitors could save the campus up to $450,000/year,
while also reducing annual emissions of greenhouse gases by 3500
tons
of carbon dioxide.
Reducing Waste: Another area where there is
ample room to lower costs while reducing our environmental footprint
is through reform of our purchasing practices and materials use.
One example is the move towards pay for printing in campus computer
labs. The Library estimated that paper use in these labs increased
by 28% and toner cartridge use increased by 35% in just one year
in 2001. Housing experienced similar increases prior to adopting
a pay-for-print system in February 2001." Housing eliminated free
printing from computer labs in the residence halls, instead charging
individual users. In the first year of implementation Housing estimated
a 55% reduction in paper use. Currently, ITS computer labs print
approximately 30,000 reams of paper annually. At a conservative
estimate of 33% savings, a conversion to pay for printing could
save 10,000 reams per year. If the reduction is as large as that
within housing, the reduction could be over 15,000 reams per year
- all at a net savings to the university.
This is an illustration
of how CU can harness the power of the free market. By having
individual users pay for their use of resources that have a high
environmental
impact � whether it is driving a car to a parking space or printing
a paper � instead of socializing the cost across the university,
resource use goes down while economic efficiency goes up.
There
are other arenas where costs can be saved and waste reduced through
smart purchasing. Some campus departments are saving money by
using recycled content paper towels and toilet paper. Other departments
have found that it is cheaper for them to purchase furniture
made
from recycled wheat straw than it is to furniture made from virgin
wood. At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the school saves
a quarter-million dollars a year by selling and reusing materials
that the university used to throw away. The undergraduate chemistry
labs at the University of Minnesota switched to "microscale" lab
techniques, which demonstrate chemical principles with much smaller
volumes of chemical. The net effect � hazardous waste generated
annually went down from 2500 gallons to 23 gallons, for a cost
savings of $37,000/year.
There may be many untapped opportunities
on this campus to reduce waste and buy greener products, at no
net cost to the campus. This could be advanced by adopting an
environmentally friendly purchasing policy, requiring that environmentally
preferable
products be purchased if they are no more expensive than the
standard products they substitute for, and by inserting environmental
language
into the bidding process.
Recycling and Composting: Colorado
has some of the lowest landfill rates in the country � so they
have no direction to go but up. From 1996 to 2001 the landfill
rates
CU has to pay went up by 83%. Despite campus growth during this
time, the amount of waste that Facilities Management delivered
to the landfill remained flat � there was even a slight decline
from 3300 tons in 1996-97 to 3100 tons in 2001-2002. Without
the CU Recycling program, CU would have to haul another 1400
tons of
waste to the landfill every year � at substantial cost. Not only
would the campus be paying to dispose of these materials, instead
of getting paid for them, but the materials would have to be
hauled much further away (the nearest landfill is in Weld County),
with
the associated trucking costs. So, while recycling costs money � there's
no free lunch! � it also reduces the campus's cost for landfill
disposal.
The business plan review of recycling conducted for
the vice chancellor's of administration and student affairs in
2002-2003 has provided a comprehensive analysis of the financial
impacts
of campus recycling activities. There are a number of highlights
from the report. It points out that over 1,400 tons will be recycled
at CU Boulder this year, which accounts for approximately 30%
of the waste generated on campus.
This analysis indicates that
recycling
is saving Facilities Management a net of $175,000 per year in
solid waste costs. For general fund waste, trash disposal costs
Facilities
Management $601/ton; recycling costs them $286/ton. In the aggregate,
every ton recycled in the general fund buildings saves the general
fund $315. Each dollar spent on recycling saves $2.10 in trash.
The reasons that recycling is so much cheaper are interesting.
The primary reason is not the tipping fee charged at the landfill
(landfill fees are only $20/ton!), but reflect the fact that
the system that has developed on campus for collection and transport
of recyclables materials is much lower cost than the collection
and transport of solid waste.
It is also striking that some campuses
have achieved recycling + composting rates of 50-60%. If CU is
able to achieve these rates, the financial benefit to the campus
will grow. The next major improvement is food waste composting
from residence halls and the UMC � which could divert 600+ tons/year.
Now, the savings from, composting will not approach the $315/ton
savings that recycling generates for general fund materials,
but nonetheless there should be net savings. Right now all of
the food
waste on campus is thrown away, and trucked to the landfill.
Meanwhile, we also buy fertilizer and soil amendments for campus
landscaping.
A composting program has the potential to save money on both
ends � reducing
disposal costs and saving money spent on purchasing soil amendments.
For example, the housing department estimates that using finished
compost instead of purchasing fertilizer could save $10,000 annually.