Catholic U of America Dedicates Solar Panel System

The system features more than 2,600 solar panels including a canopy of 714 panels over more than 70 parking spaces. Standard Solar installed the solar panels and the system will be operated by Washington Gas Energy Systems as part of a 20-year power purchasing agreement with the university.

U Colorado Boulder Renovations to Reduce Carbon Footprint

The university has begun constructing a new campus utility system that will provide heating, cooling and electricity to campus through energy-efficient means. Alongside the new 72,000-square-foot power plant designed to achieve LEED Gold certification, the university will renovate the original campus plant that will use natural gas to generate electricity. It is anticipated that the renovations will reduce carbon emissions by 30,000 metric tons per year.

U Missouri St. Louis Debuts Solar Installation

The university, in partnership with Express Scripts, has completed its first solar panel installation. The 25-kilowatt photovoltaic system installed atop of the Mark Twain Athletic & Fitness Center will also feature an information kiosk and online monitoring system.

Unity College Installs Solar Array

The college, in partnership with ReVision Energy, has constructed a 37-kilowatt, 144-panel solar photovoltaic array atop the Quimby Library and Thomashow Labs. The grid-tied system will send electricity not immediately used by the library onto the public utility grid, generating a credit for the college to be applied at other times of the year when the solar system is less productive. After six years, the college will have the option to purchase the system from ReVision.

Aligarh Muslim U to Harvest Wind Energy

(India): The university, with the support of local government, has announced plans to launch a wind energy project. Several windmills will be installed on campus to provide power and allow scientists to study climate change in the area and its impact on wind energy.

Indiana Institute of Technology Debuts Wind Turbine

(U.S.): The institute has installed a 120-feet-tall wind turbine to help engineering students learn about alternative energy sources. The turbine, a gift from the Steel Dynamics Foundation, will provide energy to the electrical grid.

U British Columbia Opens Renewable Energy Facility

(Canada): The university has unveiled a $34 million clean energy center that produces heat and electricity for the campus entirely from renewable bioenergy. The Bioenergy Research and Demonstration Facility will supply up to 12 percent of the university’s heat requirements as well as reduce its natural gas consumption by 12 percent. The facility runs on tree trimmings and wood chips from local landfills.

U Vermont Installs Solar Panels on Campus Farm

(U.S.): Funded by its Clean Energy Fund, the university’s 134 solar panels will produce an average of 100 kilowatt hours of electricity per day, enough to supply 8.5 percent of the research farm’s electricity needs. An important aspect of the demonstration project is that farmers will have the opportunity to visit, see how the system was installed, understand its economics and the incentives that are available, and determine if the technology is feasible at their own farms.

Benedictine College to Conduct Energy Audit

The college has announced plans for a three-month in-depth analysis of all campus facilities to identify opportunities for energy savings and infrastructure improvements. The evaluations will cover 24 buildings and more than 660,000 square feet of space

Mount St. Mary’s U Debuts 100-Acre Solar Farm

The new solar system will provide 16.1 megawatts of energy to power the University System of Maryland and the Maryland Department of General Services.

Rutgers U Installs 32-Acre Solar Canopy

Consisting of more than 40,000 solar panels, the $40.8 million project will generate 8 megawatts of power to satisfy 63 percent of the electrical demand on campus.

Cape Cod CC to Save $100K with Renewable Energy Installations

A large solar farm, several smaller photovoltaic arrays and a wind energy project have been installed on the community college campus over the past five months. The college expects to save more than $100,000 a year in electricity costs.

Lone Star College Installs Solar, Wind Energy Systems

The college has installed two solar panels, two solar tracking arrays and three wind generators to provide energy to the electrical system. The systems will also be used as teaching tools in advanced technology courses. Funding for the installations was provided by a $400,000 grant from the State Energy Conservation Office.

Temple U Installs Solar Powered Tables

The university has installed three solar-powered charging stations on campus. In addition to the renewable power source they offer, the Solar Dok patio tables are constructed of plastic materials made from 1,200 recycled plastic milk jugs.

Hollins U Installs Geothermal Well System

The university has completed the construction of a geothermal well field that will serve Tinker Hall, the largest student residence on campus. The system is expected to improve temperature control and indoor air quality, and reduce energy costs.

Tennessee Technological U Installs Solar Panels

The university has connected several large solar panels to the Tennessee Valley Authority’s power grid. The university received a one-time $1,000 payment as an incentive for becoming a TVA Generation Partner and will receive 12 cents for each kilowatt of power the panels produce.

California State U Sacramento to Buy Power from Solar Panels

(U.S.): The university is set to begin buying electricity generated by solar panels on the roofs of the campus library and recreation center at a constant rate of 11 cents per kilowatt-hour for the next 20 years. The privately owned and maintained solar system generates about 1.6 percent of the campus' total usage.

Montana State U Explores Geothermal-Based Heating and Cooling

(U.S.): In an ongoing effort to implement a comprehensive energy plan, the university has begun drilling test bore holes to explore the use of geothermal-based heating and cooling as a way to reduce energy consumption and costs on campus. After the holes are drilled, a group of engineering students will take part in the process of attaching testing equipment to the systems and analyzing the data collected.

U West England Installs 2 Solar Arrays

(England): The university, in partnership with Solarsense, has constructed a 50-kilowatt array on its Centre for Sport and a 32-kilowatt array atop the Department of Planning and Architecture. The university is also implementing a program to replace existing campus lights with low energy lamps.

Western Nevada College Constructs Second Solar Array

(U.S): The college, in partnership with Black Rock Solar, has constructed a 100-kilowatt photovoltaic array consisting of 840 panels. The system is expected to save the college $14,000 per year in energy costs.

U Hawaii Manoa Enters Power Purchase Agreement

The agreement signed between the university and SolarCity will provide renewable energy to the Hawai’i Institute of Marine Biology for the next 20 years. As part of the agreement, SolarCity has begun to install, and will own and maintain, a series of photovoltaic systems with the capacity to provide an estimated 25 percent of the institute’s energy needs, with 260 kilowatts of generation capacity. The project received financial support from the Center for a Sustainable Future, and is expected to provide up to $2.3 million in cost savings to the university.

College of Saint Benedict Upgrades to Energy-Efficient Lighting

The college expects to save $50,000 annually by replacing 20,000 35-watt light bulbs with 25-watt bulbs. The project was funded by a rebate from Xcel Energy and the college’s revolving loan fund.

Desert Research Institute Installs Solar Array

The institute, in partnership with Black Rock Solar, has constructed a 100-kilowatt photovoltaic array to offset the energy costs of its laboratory facilities. The cost was fully subsidized by NV Energy’s Solar Generations Program. The institute has also partnered with the State Works Division and Hamilton Solar to construct a 365-kilowatt solar array on its Las Vegas campus.

U Georgia Installs Pilot Solar Photovoltaic Modules

If the pilot installation atop the College of Environment and Design is successful in terms of clean energy efficiency, the university will consider further solar installations. Grants, student fees and a utility award from the university’s Facilities Management Division funded the project.

Central Connecticut State U Installs 1.4 MW Fuel Cell Power Plant

The university's new power plant is expected to reduce energy costs by $100,000 per year. The $9 million project was funded in part by $3.4 million provided by the Connecticut Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority. Greenwood Energy developed and financed the project, and will own the plant and sell power and steam to the university as part of a long-term energy purchase agreement.

Harford CC Approves Power Purchase Agreement

The college has entered into a power purchase agreement with Tecta Solar that is expected to save the college more than $1 million in energy costs over 20 years. The company will install a solar energy system on campus and sell the panels to a third party, which would then sell the energy generated from the panels back to the college at a discounted rate. The project will provide a website that will allow faculty and students to monitor the energy generated.

Southern Polytechnic State U Installs Solar Panels, Greenhouse

Two sets of solar panels have been installed to provide power to a new greenhouse that is expected to be complete by August. The project will provide the Alternative Energy Center and students with opportunities to collaborate. The solar panels were funded by a grant from the 2009 American Recovery and Investment Act on behalf of Marietta Power and Water, the local municipal utility.

Western Carolina U Meets State Energy Reduction Goal

Working from a 2002-03 baseline, the university has reduced its energy consumption by 30 percent. The university credits its success to student involvement and energy-saving measures including taking older buildings offline and ensuring new construction employs high building standards and energy efficiency. These conservation efforts have resulted in $13.8 million in energy savings since 2002-03. As mandated by the state, all universities in the University of North Carolina system are required to meet this goal by 2015.

Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College Installs Solar Array

The college, in partnership with New Richmond Utilities and WPPI Energy, has installed a 4-kilowatt photovoltaic solar system. The project is expected to save approximately $650 annually and will provide educational opportunities for students in the Industrial Automation and Controls Networking program.

Auburn U Uses Solar Power to Charge Electric Vehicles

(U.S.): Facilities Management, in partnership with the Office of Sustainability, has funded a pilot project for the installation of 24 solar panels atop the stadium parking deck. The solar system is designed to offset the energy used for 10 electric charging stations that have been installed on the lower level of the parking deck. The system is also expected to offset the energy to power lighting when the charging stations are not in use.

Cebu Technological U to Establish Renewable Energy Center

(Philippines): The university has received a grant to establish an Affiliated Renewable Energy Center to pursue a national program for the development of indigenous energy resources. As part of an agreement with the Department of Energy, a solar waste pumping station project will also be implemented.

Institutions Weigh Natural Gas Options in Face of Rising Tuitions

(U.S.): A solution to rising tuition prices is one reason that colleges and universities in the shale-gas zone, which extends from New York to Ohio and West Virginia, are considering the option of opening campus land to natural gas drilling, reports a recent Chronicle of Higher Education article. Pros include the money, research opportunities and new gas industry programs that "fracking" (a controversial extraction method for natural gas) would bring. Also tempting is a proposed bill that would allow Pennsylvania's public colleges to keep the money that comes from drilling for gas on their land and use it for energy-efficiency projects or a backlog of deferred maintenance, which stands at $2 billion systemwide. Cons include the environmental, socioeconomic, and public-image implications of pursuing fracking on university land in the face of local community opposition and institutionalized sustainability commitments. A new state law that directs Ohio's state institutions to inventory their parcels and determine whether gas companies can drill on them also has Ohio institutions worried that they will be forced into gas leases.

Rajiv Gandhi Indian Institute of Management Goes Solar

(India): A 50-kilowatt solar power plant was installed aimed at providing clean energy to the institute. Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi, who also advocated rainwater harvesting to conserve ground water, inaugurated the plant.

U Lisbon Wins Nationwide Green Campus Challenge

(Portugal): The University of Lisbon has been named the winner of Portugal's Green Campus Challenge: Energy Efficiency in Higher Education. After an energy analysis of one of their buildings, during which they created an energy profile that distinguished the thermal and electrical energy sectors, the Faculty of Science team presented a set of technical and behavioral changes to reduce energy consumption that included energy, economic and environmental savings.

U Mass Medical Installs LED Light Fixtures

(U.S.): A wing of recently renovated offices for research staff features the first installation of an integrated LED system for offices on campus. In combination with new lighting controls, the LED fixtures are expected to be 30 to 50 percent more energy efficient, and last up to seven years longer than the fluorescent lamps used elsewhere on campus.

U Tennessee Knoxville Installs Solar Secure Structure

(U.S.): The university has installed a new solar powered wireless structure that provides self-sufficient power and a communications source for Emergency Assistance Stations, video surveillance, LED lighting and wireless Internet. The SunStation also features a power outlet, allowing students the convenience to stay connected by using their laptops, cell phones and other technology outdoors.

Milwaukee Area Technical College Plans Wind Turbine

The college’s Center for Energy Conservation and Advanced Manufacturing has announced plans to install a 47-foot wind turbine at its Oak Creek campus. If approved by the Federal Aviation Administration, the turbine would join the campus' 510-kilowatt Photovoltaic Educational Laboratory solar array.

U Michigan Opens Sustainable Computing Data Center

The new data center has the capacity to house up to 1 megawatt of high-performance computing equipment in a compact container the size of several shipping containers. With the flexibility to expand its capacity as needed, the center is designed to cool equipment 75 percent of the year with the use of outdoor air.

Luther College Debuts 280 kW Solar Energy Field

The college's recently installed $1.2 million solar energy field is expected to go online by the end of July. Located on a two-acre site, the 280-kilowatt solar photovoltaic system features 1,250 solar panels mounted in six rows. The solar field will provide electricity used by Baker Village, an all-electric student housing facility that uses geothermal energy for heating and cooling.

Mercer County CC Solar Project to Meet 70% of Electricity Needs

The upcoming 8-megawatt solar installation on campus, funded by the Mercer County Improvement Authority, is expected to meet 70 percent of the college’s electricity needs. This will yield an approximate savings of $1 million per year in electricity costs.

Bill Could Expand Drilling on Pennsylvania College Campuses

The Pennsylvania House of Representatives has voted 131 to 68 to approve a bill that could expand oil and gas drilling on public-university campuses in the state. The legislation, which awaits a final vote in the State Senate, would allow colleges to keep 40 percent of any royalties; 15 percent of which would have to be devoted to reducing tuition costs.

Northwestern U Wins National Clean Energy Biz Plan Competition

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has announced that NuMat Technologies from Northwestern University (IL) won the first-ever DOE National Clean Energy Business Plan Competition. Part of the Obama Administration's Startup America Initiative, the competition aims to inspire university teams across the country and promote entrepreneurship in clean energy technologies that will boost American competitiveness. NuMat Technologies presented a plan to commercialize a nanomaterial that stores gases at lower pressure, reducing infrastructure costs and increasing design flexibility.

Stanford U Receives $1.6 M Energy Rebate

After retrofitting four campus buildings for greater energy efficiency, the university has earned $1.64 million in cash rebates from Pacific Gas & Electric through the utility's incentive programs. Upgrades to heating, cooling, ventilation, electrical and water systems over the last two years are expected to save more than $1.8 million annually in energy costs.

Syracuse U Installs Energy-Efficient Upgrades to Steam Station

Two recently installed air compressors will cut the steam plant's water use by three million gallons a year and save electricity. The university estimates that the new equipment will lower the steam station’s compressed-air costs by as much as 57 percent per year.

U California Davis Unveils Outdoor 'Smart' Lighting System

Part of the university's Smart Lighting Initiative, the nearly-completed $1 million network of "smart" lights can coordinate with each other and adapt to their environment. The system senses occupants and can be scheduled and adjusted for increased or decreased levels of activity. The new outdoor lights are expected to save the university $100,000 a year in electricity costs and offset the equivalent annual greenhouse gas emissions of 135 cars and trucks. Later this year, the university will begin the installation of adaptive, networked lighting on the inside of campus buildings.

U Findlay Debuts Wind Turbine, Solar Array

The university has announced the completion of a wind turbine and solar panel array that will be used to power student housing facilities. The installations will also serve as a learning tool for students in the environmental, safety and health management fields.

Stanford U Announces Green Energy Systems Makeover

The university's Stanford Energy Systems Innovations (SESI) project will convert all campus steam piping to hot water and replace the current cogeneration plant with a new heat recovery facility. Once complete, SESI is expected to reduce campus greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent and campus potable water use by 18 percent. The university has launched a website for those interested in following the project through an interactive campus map that shows current and upcoming areas of construction.

Eastern Illinois U Plans Clean Energy Research Center

(U.S.): The university has announced plans for its Clean Energy Research and Education Center. Construction of the $1 million, 4,300-square-foot building will begin this fall.

Montclair State U to Develop CHCP Power System

(U.S.): The university has partnered with Energenic-US, LLC to develop a new environmentally friendly combined heating, cooling and power system for its campus. The new facility and its related infrastructure improvements will replace the campus' existing energy plant, which began generating steam in the 1940s.

Sultan Qaboos U Installs Photovoltaic Test Bed System

(South Korea): The 1-kilowatt Desert Photovoltaic Test Bed System will provide students with the opportunity to study and develop solar power systems. The university has also announced plans to introduce a postgraduate program in renewable energy in the near future.