91³Ō¹Ļ

With students at the forefront, 91³Ō¹Ļ implements ambitious sustainability plan

Students sit under trees with cherry blossoms at 91³Ō¹Ļ Scarborough Campus
In its third annual report, the Presidentā€™s Advisory Committee on the Environment, Climate Change, and Sustainability outlines steps itā€™s taking to put in place sustainability-related projects and initiatives across the university (photo by Ken Jones)

Students are at the forefront of the 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s efforts ā€“ now entering the implementation phase ā€“ to make itself a global leader in sustainability education, research and operations.

In , the Presidentā€™s Advisory Committee on the Environment, Climate Change, and Sustainability (CECCS) outlines the concrete steps itā€™s taking to advance sustainability-related projects and initiatives across the university.

They include setting up internships for students to learn about sustainability initiatives underway at universities abroad, earmarking new building and retrofit projects on campus as ā€œliving labsā€ for students and researchers, and designating professors to work with deans to integrate sustainability content into degree programs.

ā€œWeā€™re trying to make this as student-led and student-focused as possible,ā€ said John Robinson, chair of the committee and the presidentā€™s adviser on environment, climate change and sustainability.

ā€œIn the end, this is about our students.ā€

Robinson added that the latest CECCS report shows how 91³Ō¹Ļ is now implementing, in concrete ways, the initiatives it laid out in its previous two reports.

ā€œWe now have more resources, full-time staff and funding for student projects, and are well-placed to pursue our goal of achieving transformative change on sustainability.ā€

The release of the report comes on the heels of last weekā€™s University Climate Change Coalition (UC3) conference in Vancouver, where 20 universities, including 91³Ō¹Ļ, launched a joint research and development platform to study climate policy and make actionable recommendations for university leaders. 

Robinson, a professor in the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy and the School of the Environment, represented 91³Ō¹Ļ at UC3ā€™s inaugural conference.

The report also follows President Meric Gertlerā€™s recent trip to Paris for the U7+ Alliance, where he spearheaded discussions on climate change and sustainability, and signed, on 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s behalf, a declaration to strengthen the role of universities in addressing key global challenges.

ā€œI am pleased to see the steady progress made by the Presidentā€™s Advisory Committee on the Environment, Climate Change, and Sustainability,ā€ President Gertler said.

ā€œThe three spheres of activity identified by the committee ā€“ curriculum innovation, campus as a living lab and the university as an agent of change in the community ā€“ are areas of crucial importance as we collectively address sustainability across our three campuses, our surrounding communities, and around the world.ā€

The committeeā€™s third report makes it clear that students are central 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s plans to integrate sustainability into university life and operations.

Among the new initiatives is the Adams Sustainability Champion Internship, a summer internship program ā€“ funded by a gift from Wendy Adams ā€“ that gives undergraduate students the opportunity to spend time abroad at other universities to learn about their sustainability efforts.

Two students have already been selected to travel to Utrecht University in the Netherlands and the University of Edinburgh in Scotland this summer. Their research will culminate in a journal article comparing the impact of sustainability initiatives at those institutions to 91³Ō¹Ļ, with the findings to be presented to the committee and  in October.

Robinson says the committee hopes to expand the internship program to six students in 2020.

ā€œThe interns become a kind of connective tissue among universities leading in sustainability ā€“ and to have this done by undergraduate students is pretty cool,ā€ said Robinson.

Another example of the committeeā€™s student focus is the newly instituted 91³Ō¹Ļ Sustainability Innovation Prize, which recognizes student-led startups and products that tackle sustainability-related  issues. Three student projects took home $5,000 each at the inaugural awards ceremony in June.

The committee is also developing a template to involve students in six carefully selected ā€œliving labā€ projects, allowing them both to learn from ā€“ and contribute to ā€“ sustainability-oriented projects. Two projects, one new and one retrofit, have been selected on each campus. They include a new 750-bed residence at 91³Ō¹Ļ Scarborough; the academic wood tower project on the downtown Toronto campus; and a new science building at 91³Ō¹Ļ Mississauga. 

On the academic front, work is underway to create curricular ā€œpathwaysā€ to allow undergraduate students to incorporate sustainability themes into their degrees, regardless of their program ā€“ an initiative Robinson says is unique among global universities.

He says the initiatives are all part of the committeeā€™s overarching mission to leverage 91³Ō¹Ļā€™s existing strengths in sustainability research, teaching and operations and ā€œstrengthen and co-ordinate them to get to the next level.ā€

To that end, 91³Ō¹Ļ carried out a mapping exercise to track all its climate research assets ā€“ including institutes, departments, labs and experts ā€“ and uploaded them to the UC3ā€™s Climate Research Assets database as part of a drive to promote collaboration among like-minded universities.

While 91³Ō¹Ļ is making great strides on sustainability, Robinson stressed thereā€™s still much to do. ā€œIf you compare what weā€™re doing across UC3, U7+ and the initiatives outlined in the committeeā€™s report, youā€™ll see that 91³Ō¹Ļ is already in a leadership role in several areas relative to those 20 or 30 universities,ā€ he said.

ā€œWeā€™re doing some really good things, but thereā€™s a long way to go before we get to the point where, when someone says ā€˜91³Ō¹Ļ,ā€™ the word ā€˜sustainabilityā€™ pops into their mind. Thatā€™s where we want to be.ā€

UTC