Cal Poly San Luis Obispo Students Lead 'Turn Em Out' Campaign

California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo's student Green Campus Program recently led a month-long campaign to reduce campus electricity bills. The "Turn Em Out" campaign urged campus community members to turn off lights and other electric appliances when not in use. In an effort to raise awareness and promote positive sustainable habits on campus, the campaign asked students and faculty to submit photos of themselves creatively switching off lights for a chance to win gift cards, power strips and a pumpkin pie party.

Connecticut College Student Gov't Passes Solar Panel Initiative

Connecticut College's Student Government Association has approved the use of the college's Renewable Energy Fund (supported by a $25 increase to the college's comprehensive fee) for the purchase and installation of solar photovoltaic panels. Students hope the college will match their contribution to help offset additional costs. Three of the proposed panel installations would generate 0.9 percent of the campus' electricity needs. If the administration approves additional funding, the total energy generated would increase to 3.6 percent, which would save $108,000 per year in electricity costs.

U Tennessee Chattanooga to Sponsor Sustainability Garden Program

The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga's Environmental Task Force has approved funding for a sustainability garden program starting in spring 2012. Twelve multidisciplinary students will be selected to sustain two raised bed vegetable gardens as well as attend workshops offered by local organic farmers. The university hopes to become part of the emerging local food movement in Chattanooga.

U Texas San Antonio Solicits Student Campus Sustainability Ideas

The University of Texas at San Antonio, with support from the United Negro College Fund's Institute for Capacity Building, has launched a contest that invites students to submit implementable and sustainable ideas toward campus sustainability efforts. Winners of the "Campus Greening Idea Contest" will receive prizes including $1,500 for first place.

Temple U Fraternity Participates in Energy Audit

As part of a partnership between Temple University's (PA) Office of Sustainability and the Intrafraternity Council's Greeks Go Green organization, members of Kappa Delta Rho recently participated in an energy audit of their fraternity house. The fraternity members will replicate the energy-saving tasks they learned from a representative at the Philadelphia-based Energy Coordinating Agency in nine other fraternity houses in the Interfraternity Council.

Indiana U Debuts Green Dorm Room Certification Program

In its inaugural month, the Green Dorm Room Certification Program at Indiana University Bloomington has yielded 40 "green" dorm rooms. The self-certification program gives students access to 40 criteria for earning a “green” certification. The initiative aims to connect students to sustainability-related community and campus organizations, and provide a framework for educating their peers about sustainability.

Appalachian State U Expands Sustainable Teaching Farm

Appalachian State University (NC) students now have the chance to live and work at the university's new Sustainable Development Teaching and Research Farm. The program has relocated to the larger property with a three-bedroom residence and turkeys and cattle, giving students the opportunity for around-the-clock livestock research. The student caretakers have also received a grant to make their residence 90 percent solar-powered with the installation of solar thermal and solar photovoltaic panels on the roof.

Johns Hopkins U Students to Create Community Garden

Johns Hopkins University’s (MD) student-run group, Real Food Hopkins, will plant a 4,000-square-foot garden this fall to serve as a model for urban gardening and sustainable agriculture. Students, staff and faculty will be able to sign up for individual plots or work with a neighborhood community group beginning next spring. Plot managers can keep what they produce as well as donate a portion of the crops to the university’s Campus Kitchen, which donates surplus food to those who are in need in the Baltimore area.

Syracuse U Student Creates Sustainability Group

After being turned away from the faculty-only Sustainability Division of Syracuse University’s (NY) Energy Systems and Sustainability Management department, a freshman policy studies major recently started her own sustainability student group. Fourteen students from different majors including geography, international relations and civil engineering have signed up to get involved in campus issues like food waste, recycling, consumption and plastic water bottle waste. The group will kick off its efforts with the proposal of one pilot water refill station to test student reaction.

U Michigan Students Place Third in Int'l Solar Car Challenge

A team of engineering students at the University of Michigan took third place in the World Solar Challenge competition with their solar car, Quantum, which was the first American car to the finish line. The 20-member team, which raced across the Australian continent, included a meteorologist whose forecasts, made possible by a satellite link, predicted cloud cover and helped develop strategies for power supply management.

San Diego Students Pursue LEED Gold for Aquatics Center

The new San Diego State University U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) student chapter is collaborating with University of California, San Diego students to pursue LEED Gold certification for an aquatics center that is jointly owned by the two universities. The center has undergone upgrades including the installation of enough solar photovoltaic panels to support 100 percent of its energy needs. Students are working on an audit of the center's conditions, which they will present to USGBC.

Temple U Students Create Sustainability 'Ad Campaign'

A class of advertising majors at Temple University (PA) were recently tasked with creating a university-wide campaign to promote Campus Sustainability Week, held October 24-28. The winning campaign promoted simple ways for students to make small differences.

U Findlay Students Plan Energy Retrofits for Student Housing

Students living in two University of Findlay (OH) houses are developing and implementing ways to save energy and create less waste. Instruments were installed to measure water, electricity and natural gas use. Grant funds will be used to install either solar or wind power, which will be planned and scheduled by students in the university's environmental, safety, and occupational health program.

Yale U Management Students Form Sustainability Team

Students at Yale University's (CT) School of Management (SOM) have formed a new Student Sustainability Team to assist the SOM community with environmentally friendly practices. Ranging from reducing electricity use in buildings to running "zero-landfill" events, SOM's first student-run effort aims to implement green initiatives to act as a model for the rest of the university to adopt.

Clemson U Students Debut Bike Trailer for Tailgating

With the goal of reducing the carbon footprint of tailgating by removing the classic car aspect, a group of Clemson University (SC) students has debuted a bike trailer for tailgating. The trailer folds out to include a table and chairs, a grill and a cooler. The group also has created a larger unit that can accommodate up to six families. In related news, the President's Commission on Sustainability and Clemson Recycling have partnered to provide more recycling bins and trailers at football games.

Georgia Tech Students Design Electric Vehicle System for Atlanta

A team of undergraduate students at the Georgia Institute of Technology are helping the City of Atlanta toward its goal of becoming the first region in the country to have 50,000 electric vehicles on its roads. The city will use funding from the U.S. Department of Energy to implement the students’ proposal, which outlined electric vehicle adoption and marketing strategies and emphasized ways of reducing the cost to the city government.

CA Institutions to Launch Student Clean Technology Competition

The California Institute of Technology, University of Southern California, OnGreen and University of California, Los Angeles have received a $360,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to accelerate clean technology innovation through student entrepreneurship. A new Western Regional business plan student competition will work to double the number of student groups engaged in clean technology production.

Indiana U Rolls Out Student Sustainable Computing Contest

Indiana University has launched a competition designed to make its computing more sustainable. Students will work in groups to create a tool, system or process that addresses at least one of three sustainable computing areas: waste reduction, leveraging IT for campus-wide sustainability gains, and campus sustainability metrics.

Maharishi U Mgmt Student Promotes Sustainability with T-Shirts

A student at the Maharishi University of Management (IA) recently launched a line of organic cotton T-shirts with messages designed to educate about sustainability. His best-selling shirt has a solar power design on the front and a simplified schematic of how solar power works on the back. A percentage of the sales are donated each month to a charitable foundation or community project.

Whitman College Students Create Vermicomposting Program

Students from the Campus Climate Challenge at Whitman College (WA) have launched a new vermicomposting initiative. Thousands of worms will break down campus food waste into compost for campus landscaping. The college expects the vermicomposter to be able to process about 100 pounds of food waste per day.

Temple U Students Initiate Bike-Powered Concerts

Verde Styles, an environmental student group at Temple University (PA), is expanding its bike-powered concert initiative. The idea has grown from a single bicycle that powered part of the sound system during Earth Day to a four-bike setup that recently powered the sound at two local green-awareness events. Next year, they plan to power a bigger concert with 50 to 60 bikes. The bikes were funded in part by a $5,000 grant from Hewlett-Packard.

U Massachusetts Students Debut Farmers Market

The University of Massachusetts Amherst has launched a student-run farmers market. Leafy greens, ripe tomatoes, garlic and squash were among the student-grown and organic selections for sale during its debut. The Student Farming Enterprise, a six-credit course at the university, also runs a community supported agriculture (CSA) program.

NY Times: Fordham U Administrators Shutter Farm Share

Fordham University's legal counsel ordered the shutdown of the School of Law's farm share program this month, reports the New York Times. Founded by third-year law student Michael Zimmerman, Farm to Fordham allowed students, faculty and staff to buy a share of a harvest from a local farm for $150 per semester. Objections to the project remain “perplexing” to Zimmerman. Law school administrators declined to comment on the university's decision.

City College Students Construct Solar Roofpod

Students from City College (NY) have designed and built a Solar Roofpod to compete in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon. The 750-square-foot pod has a solar trellis that collects energy, computer-controlled heating and ventilation systems, and windows and blinds that are programmed to automatically open and close. Additional features include a built-in alert system to let the occupant know how much water and electricity is being used, and a rainwater harvesting system that supports an incorporated garden.

Lafayette U Students Working toward Campus-wide Food Loop

Lafayette University's (PA) Society of Environmental Engineers and Scientists student group is working on the implementation of a campus-wide food loop. The project involves composting food waste from campus dining halls that is then used to fertilize crops grown at the college's organic gardens, which are then used back in the dining halls. The goal is to compost up to 1,000 pounds of the 1,300 pounds of food and yard waste produced by the campus per day.

Cornell U Students Design Garden that Cleans Toxic Waste

Featuring ferns, grasses and black elder trees that absorb lead and arsenic from fertilizers and lead arsenate from pesticides, five landscape architecture graduate students at Cornell University (NY) have designed a garden with plants capable of cleaning up hazardous waste sites. Focusing on plants that draw in, store, and in some cases convert, toxic materials into benign compounds, the students' garden includes more than 50 plant species including sunflowers, cabbage plants, rice and willows.

Duke U Students Create Guide to Green Living on Campus

Students at Duke University (NC) have created a new Green Book, an online guide to living in an eco-friendly way at Duke University (NC) for first-year students. Many incoming students will also receive a hard copy of the book, printed on recycled paper, as they are distributed during Orientation Welcome Week. The book was created in collaboration with campus offices including Sustainable Duke, Duke Recycles, and Duke Parking and Transportation to develop a comprehensive guide to sustainability resources on campus. Students will find information about dining, recycling, alternative transportation and other aspects of green campus life. The book also provides information that is useful to students before they arrive on campus.

Ecotech Institute Launches Student Mentorship Program

The Ecotech Institute (CO), a trade school focused entirely on renewable energy, sustainable design and green technology that opened its doors at the start of this year, has announced a new student mentorship program for incoming students. The program pairs the new students with a continuing student to help with the course material and often unfamiliar surroundings.

Inside Higher Ed Covers Rise in Student Farms

The efforts of the University of Montana and Prescott College (AZ), among others, are profiled in a recent Inside Higher Ed article that looks at the current growth of student-run farms on college campuses. The article highlights the new book, "Fields of Learning: The Student Farm Movement in America," in which Iowa State University Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture's Frederick L. Kirschenmann says that student farms play a critical role in training the next generation of farmers.

U Alaska Anchorage Debuts First Student Campus Garden

Student members of the University of Alaska Anchorage’s Sustainability Club have constructed a raised-bed garden and whiskey barrel planters for the first student garden on campus. Students planted swiss chard, radishes, spicy salad mix and lettuce. The whiskey barrels are being used to grow potatoes, zucchinis, herbs and berry shrubs. The Sustainability Club plans to harvest the produce and hold a community feast.

Northwestern U Students Construct 'Tiny House'

Students and alumni of the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science at Northwestern University (IL) have begun construction on a Tiny House project that will serve as a display to the community. Part of a movement stemming from high energy prices and an increased interest in sustainability, the tiny zero net-energy house - with a toilet in the shower - will produce its own electricity using solar panels and collect all of its water. The tiny house movement, which emphasizes living simply and creatively using the space one has, is defined by some enthusiasts as less than 140 square feet. Construction began in the spring and the team intends to complete the home in the fall.

Clark U Student Orchestrates Bike Initiative for Campus Police

A student at Clark University (MA) has launched a University Bike Patrol initiative on campus. Funded by the university's Big Idea Contest, one officer was outfitted with a patrol bike and uniform. In a show of support, the Police Department purchased a second bike and uniform. In addition to increased safety and officer visibility among students, the bike patrol will help decrease the university's greenhouse gas emissions with fewer sports utility police vehicles.

Dartmouth College Greek Community Creates Sustainability Council

Two Office of Sustainability interns at Dartmouth College (NH) have begun working to initiate a new Greek council on sustainability. The council will provide a forum for Greek organizations to share ideas and work together to promote efficient use of resources. The current council has identified short and long-term goals, the first of which is to increase recycling in Greek houses. Long-term goals include conducting energy audits, energy-efficient lighting and ensuring that there is insulation in place for the winter. Additionally, the council hopes to organize a competition that would award a prize to Greek organizations for improvements in sustainability.

New Jersey IT, Rutgers U Students Build Sustainable Home

A group of architecture, planning and engineering students from the New Jersey Institute of Technology and Rutgers University (NJ) have built a one-story house as a submission to the 2011 Solar Decathlon, an international green technology contest staged every two years by the U.S. Department of Energy. The 940-square-foot house features a modular structure, precast concrete walls and an inverted roof to catch water and sunlight. Solar and thermal technology is integrated into every exposed surface of the house, which produces enough energy to power all of its appliances and maintain a comfortable temperature year-round.

Indian Youth Climate Network Reports on World Environment Day

From a plastic waste removal event to an environmental march, the Indian Youth Climate Network has documented the efforts of its chapters for World Environment Day in June. Its Jammu chapter created awareness through a movie screening and Green Campus Challenge and the Gwalior chapter organized a painting competition themed "Go Green" where students were asked to imagine how they would promote messages like "Go Green" and "Save the Environment."

Korea U Students Launch Organic Farmers Club

With the objective to teach themselves about organic farming techniques, a group of Korea University (South Korea) students have created the Seed Folks group. The group will provide students with the chance to plant and grow vegetables on campus and learn about organic farming through a Real Garden School workshop. So far, the workshops have attracted about 60 students.

La Trobe, Melbourne U Students Help Farmers with Sustainability

Australian students from La Trobe University and Melbourne University have traveled to Indonesia to work with farmers. The program links institutions and growers to help improve the sustainability of agricultural practices. The students held meetings with area farmers to talk about sustainable practices including storage, use of chemicals and diversifying crops.

London Metropolitan U Students Build Solar Decathlon Home

London Metropolitan University (United Kingdom) students have created an energy-efficient home for the 2012 Solar Decathlon Europe competition. Using techniques in digital design and manufacturing, the team of students designed a home to demonstrate the technology available in today’s market that offers a new way of sustainable living. The curved design has been specifically configured to work with its surrounding environment to reduce its energy consumption. Photovoltaic panels to power the home are being placed using precise solar data and parametric techniques to optimize energy generation.

Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne Students Plan to Green Campus

Students at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland) have announced plans to help make the campus become more sustainable. Doctorate students will focus on transportation, water, alternative energy and urban planning. The students will also work alongside local businesses to improve infrastructure and environmental practices in the community.

U Tampere Students Pilot Endangered Lichen Green Roof Project

Students at the University of Tampere, known as the first and only fair trade campus in Finland, are pioneering a green roof project to promote the growth of endangered lichen and mosses on limestone beds. The project is an effort to preserve a threatened habitat in Finland, as the majority of limestone beds have been mined for fertilizer.

Lakeland College Student Club Launches Green Roof Project

The Lakeland College (WI) Environmental Club has initiated a green roof project. The club is looking for answers concerning native grasses and plants and how they cope with the climate. Several varieties of grasses and perennials were planted with different levels of soil. With the help from the carpentry department, the club cut and assembled four structures with sloping roofs to help with irrigation. The club plans to water the plants at first and then see if the gardens can maintain themselves and survive until next year.

U Kansas Students Create Solar-Powered Autoclave

University of Kansas engineering students have designed and built a five-foot, funnel shaped metal autoclave to sterilize medical instruments using solar energy. The project was specifically created for a doctor who is working in Zimbabwe. Another group of students will continue testing and fine-tuning the autoclave. The project cost $1,500 and is expected to be ready by next May.

U Michigan Announces Planet Blue Ambassador Program

The University of Michigan has announced the creation of a new seminar-based program that will provide the necessary skills and training for Planet Blue Ambassadors. The ambassadors will model and teach sustainability practices and serve as Eco Reps to the university community. The program hopes to create a culture of sustainability across all university units. The two-credit seminar is open to all students living in university housing and will meet every two weeks during the fall 2011 and winter 2012 semesters for classroom education and training. Students will also dedicate an additional three hours per week to working on various projects. The Planet Blue Ambassadors pilot program will accept a total of 25 students, with 10 staff members participating.

U Utah Student Initiates Solar Ivy Installation

An environmental studies major at the University of Utah has initiated the installation of a new product called Solar Ivy, a composition of small photovoltaic panels shaped so that they can be installed in an attractive arrangement, much like ivy growing over a building’s surface. The panels generate electricity that is consumed by the building, offsetting the amount of power the building purchases from the utility company. The majority of the project’s funding was provided by the university’s student-led Sustainable Campus Initiative Fund. The Solar Ivy project was awarded a grant for approximately two-thirds of the $42,000 cost.

Harvard U Freshman Pilot Vermiculture Project

Harvard University (MA) freshman group Green 14' recently debuted a vermiculture project in the Thayer Hall dorm. The students placed vermiculture bins, which use the natural composting abilities of earthworms, on each floor. To raise awareness, the group brought food like strawberries, grapes, bananas, celery, peanuts in the shell, bread and peanut butter to study breaks to show which foods could be composted.

Clark U Recognizes Student Sustainability Leadership

Clark University (MA) recently handed out its first Leadership in Sustainability award to a student. Hannah J. Tirrell-Wysocki, who served as an Eco Reps coordinator and founder of the Clark Sustainability Collaborative, raised sustainability awareness as an orientation coordinator, peer adviser and campus tour guide.

Linfield College Students Embark on Sustainability Road Trip

Six students from Linfield College (OR) are traveling cross-country this summer in a renovated veggie oil bus to promote sustainability. Dubbed "The Self Express," the bus features donated bamboo boards, solar panels and used veggie oil from Community Plate in McMinnville, Ore. Enviofuel of Corvallis, Ore. donated the labor to install a new veggie oil system. The students will stop first in Salt Lake City for the sentencing of Tim DeChristopher, convicted for disrupting an oil-and-gas lease auction by bidding when he wasn't planning to buy in an attempt to protest policies on climate change. The bus hopes to connect with other forward-thinking youth, nonprofits and media there. The students also plan to visit Appalachia to see the environmental and social devastation of mountaintop removal coal mining.

Santa Clara U Students Create Carbon Calculator

Inviting their peers to consider the connections between their actions and carbon emissions, Environmental Ethics Fellows at Santa Clara University (CA) have created a Carbon Footprint Calculator for students to measure their impact on the environment. The students developed the calculator with open-source programming to allow other universities to adopt the same model.

Shoreline CC Students Perform Energy Audit

Shoreline Community College (WA) students performed an energy audit for the Parent Child Center building on campus. The students presented their findings and made recommendations that would reduce the amount of energy loss and save energy costs. Recommendations included a new heat ventilation air conditioning system, Energy Star Rated appliances, low-flow plumbing and a rooftop garden to reduce the heat gain in the summer.

U California Riverside Students to Develop Solar Clothes Dryer

A team of students from the Bourns College of Engineering at the University of California, Riverside have been selected for a $15,000 grant from the U.S Environmental Protection Agency to develop a system that will use heat from the sun to operate a clothes dryer. The system will harness solar thermal heat from a rooftop solar heat collector and heated air from the attic. The students are working to implement the concept at a 30-home zero net energy, urban agriculture-focused community planned for 10 acres. The heated air can also be directed through air ducts for space heating applications in the house as needed to reduce the electric and natural gas heating costs. The students estimate that using the system will save nearly $6,500 in a 20-year period. In April 2012, the students will travel to Washington, D.C. to find out if they won the $90,000 phase two grant that would provide funding to commercialize the idea.