1 / 18

How sustainable is The Evergreen State College?

How sustainable is The Evergreen State College?. 2011 - 2012 Research by Clay Showalter and Arij Beebe-Sweet Energy Systems and Climate Change, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA. Hypothesis. H1: Evergreen is sustainable.

steffi
Download Presentation

How sustainable is The Evergreen State College?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How sustainable is The Evergreen State College? 2011 - 2012 Research by Clay Showalter and Arij Beebe-Sweet Energy Systems and Climate Change, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA

  2. Hypothesis • H1: Evergreen is sustainable. • H2: Evergreen is sustainable to some degree, but needs to improve certain elements to become truly sustainable. • H3: Evergreen is not sustainable. • Null: There is no way to measureEvergreen’s sustainability.

  3. What is Sustainability? • The capacity to endure. • People • Planet • Profit geo Logic Systems http://geologicsystems.wordpress.com/2011/06/21/a-business-case-for-sustainability-attention-alberta-oil-sands-operations/

  4. Why is sustainability important?

  5. Carrying Capacity • All living things are reliant on a healthy ecosystem. • All creatures impose a load on their environment’s ability to supply what they need and absorb what they excrete. • Carrying capacity is the maximum persistently feasible load for a given creature and way of life.

  6. Humans & Carrying Capacity • Technological advances can increase the Earth’s human carrying capacity. • Phantom carrying capacity. • Each enlargement of human carrying capacity means diverting some of Earth’s life supporting capacity away from other species.

  7. How is sustainability measured? • There are several established ways for measuring sustainability • Life Cycle Analysis • Environmental Sustainability Index • Ecological Footprint Analysis • Anthropologists Cultural Approach • AASHE STARS (Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System, for Colleges and Universities) • Current system used and acknowledged by Evergreen.

  8. Choosing our Metric • Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) • The GRI framework is the most widely used standardized sustainability reporting framework in the world. • Developed by NGO’s CERES and Tellus Institute (supported by UNEP) in 1997 • Has gone through several revisions as an understanding of the metric has evolved current standard G4 is in practice.

  9. Six Performance Indicators • Environmental • Human Rights • Labor Practices and Decent Work • Society • Product Responsibility • Economic

  10. Environmental • Materials • Energy • Water • Biodiversity • Emmissions, Effluents, and Waste • Products and Services

  11. Human Rights • Investment and Procurement Practices • Non-discrimination • Freedom of Association and Collective Bargaining • Security Practices • Indigenous Rights • Assessment/Remediation

  12. Labor Practices and Decent Work • Employment • Labor/Management Relations • Occupational Health and Safety • Training and Education • Diversity and Equal Opportunity • Equal Renumeration for Women and Men

  13. Society • Community engagement • Operations impacts on local communities • Compliance with laws and regulations

  14. Product/Services Responsibilities • Lifecycle stages of products with health and safety impacts • Practices related to customer satisfaction, such as surveys and evaluations

  15. Economic • Direct economic value generated and distributed • Policy and practices of spending • Hiring procedures for administration

  16. Boundaries • Should Faculty and Student commuting practices be included in our GRI?

  17. Decision Tree GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines http://www.globalreporting.org/NR/rdonlyres/D8B503A9-070C-43DB-AD0F-5C4ACB1EBF39/0/G31RefSheet.pdf

  18. Conclusion • Critical evaluation of metric (GRI) and its implementation. • Global Reporting Initiative • Systems Thinking • Vision of the Future • Question society faces: What impacts are we willing to absorb or endure?

More Related