THROUGH ITS LEADERSHIP ACROSS EMORY UNIVERSITY, Emory Healthcare, and in the Atlanta community, the Office of Sustainability Initiatives, Resilience, and Economic Inclusion (OSI) and its partners have made tremendous impacts, not only on our campus environments, but also in our classrooms, laboratories, and health care facilities.
And what’s been implemented locally thrives out in the greater world wherever the university’s cutting-edge research—and its sustainability-minded alumni—have taken root. Here are 26 ways Emory is making a difference on its campuses and around the globe by investing in the future of our planet:
Emory University ranks No. 6 in the United States out of 853 schools surveyed in The Princeton Review’s 2022 Guide to Green Colleges based on 2019 data evaluated for administrative and academic excellence in sustainability.
The Piedmont Project, the country’s
longest running faculty development program in sustainability, was launched at Emory in 2001. For 21 years, Emory has developed the curriculum, led, and hosted this national program for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE), supporting more than 600 educators from across the country—including over 250 Emory faculty members—to integrate sustainability into their curriculum.
Emory in 2021 earned a “Gold” rating in the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment, and Rating System (STARS) Report for leadership and innovation in sustainability from AASHE—the 4th time in a row it has achieved this honor.
Lofty—but attainable—sustainability goals for the university’s campuses include 45 percent carbon reduction by 2030 (from 2010 levels) and total carbon neutrality by 2050, 100 percent clean energy by 2035, 95 percent diversion of waste from landfills, and 50 percent reduction in the use of potable water, among many others.
Two years ago, Emory signed a
transformative solar power agreement with Cherry Street Energy to install more than 15,000 solar panels on its campuses. These panels will generate approximately 10 percent of Emory’s peak energy requirements and reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions by about 4,300 metric tons.
A founding member of the
Sustainable Purchasing Leadership Council, Emory has helped create a shared, national platform for guiding, measuring, and recognizing leadership in sustainable purchasing.
In its most recent ranking,
Business Insider placed Emory
No. 20 among universities for students who want to change the world, with our sustainability leadership cited as a key factor.
Emory faculty have
created or modified more than 400 courses in 40 academic departments that are related to sustainability. Sixty-one percent of academic departments have sustainability course offerings.
The university has developed minors, certificates, and concentrations in sustainability for both undergraduate and graduate students that teach students sustainability as an integrated concept. Undergrads can earn a Sustainability Minor in Interdisciplinary Studies OR A Sustainability Sciences Minor through Emory College’s Department of Environmental Sciences, or concentrate in environmental management through Goizueta Business School. They can also strengthen leadership skills while creating sustainable community change with the Ethics and Servant Leadership Program and the Community Building and Social Change Minor.
Graduate students can work toward a
MASTER’S DEGREE IN DEVELOPMENT PRACTICE at Laney Graduate School and a
Master’s DEGREE of Public Health in Environmental Health and
Certificate in Climate and Health at the Rollins School of Public Health.
The Turner Environmental Law Clinic and the Environmental and Natural Resources Law Program, directed by clinical professor of law Mindy Goldstein, train School of Law students to become sustainability leaders in environmental law.
Emory’s School of Medicine received the
No. 1 ranking on the Planetary Health Report Card by medical students and faculty covering 62 medical schools in the US, UK, Ireland, and Canada based on curriculum that incorporates climate change and operational leadership.
The Emory Oxford Organic Farm, located on the edge of Oxford Campus, was created in 2014 on eleven acres of land donated by an Emory alumnus. This interactive outdoor classroom gives students hands-on experience in sustainable agriculture and provides fresh food for Emory’s campuses and the surrounding communities.
Ninety-five percent of Emory students report an increase in sustainability-related knowledge during their time learning at the university. But more important, 46 percent of students say they increased their own sustainable behaviors while at Emory.
In June 2021,
the student-led Plastic-Free Emory group worked with President Gregory L. Fenves to adopt a
“Break Free from Plastics Pledge” that commits the university to reduce its consumption of unnecessary single-use plastics. Co-founded by students Nithya Narayanaswamy 21Ox 23C and CJ O’Brien 21G, the group has built a broad coalition to collect data, engage the Emory community, and develop actionable solutions.
Just months later in October 2021, the
Emory Climate Coalition—comprised of three student groups—enlisted President Fenves, on behalf of the university community, to join the
Global Race to Zero, an initiative backed by higher ed institutions devoted to achieving
zero carbon emissions.
At the same time, President Fenves also signed the
Second Nature Climate Leadership Network, joining 450 other universities and colleges that have agreed to take actionable and trackable steps toward
reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Since its founding in 2006, the
OSI has offered more than
170 internships to Emory students who use research, data analysis, outreach, training, communications, and programmatic skills to integrate sustainability into all levels of the Emory enterprise.
This spring, OSI is launching its
inaugural postgraduate fellowship program and adding a new
Climate Solutions Fellow and
a Sustainability and Social Justice Programs Fellow. Both will gain one full year of expertise and mentorship in these areas.
Under the tutelage of associate professor of environmental sciences Eri Saikawa,
four Emory students—Kaela Wilkinson 23C, Ryan Thorne 23G, Marlon Gant 23G, and Chiara Brust 23PH—had the incredible opportunity to share their voices on the world stage at the
2021 UN Climate Change Conference and gain invaluable experience as scholars and advocates for climate change solutions.
Emory’s
Resilience and Sustainability Collaboratory (RSC) is a
think-and-do tank that leverages the collective expertise of corporate leaders, university faculty and staff, government, and community organizations and plugs into actionable projects that generate innovative solutions to sustainability and resilience challenges. RSC projects are first tested locally, exploring on-the-ground solutions that may be translatable and scalable to communities across the globe.
One RSC project led by professor Eri Saikawa involves
soil testing in West Atlanta, where exposure to heavy metals and metalloids can cause serious health consequences and even death. Having found slag dumps and high levels of these contaminants in the soil, the project is working to
increase awareness in the community while encouraging systematic testing and community-engaged remediation.
The
Working Farms Fund, a partnership between Emory and The Conservation Fund, has acquired farmland within 100 miles of Atlanta that helps
protect and promote small and mid-sized farms surrounding the metro area while generating a resilient food supply. This land is leased to a new generation of farmers with a five- to 10-year path to ownership. In November 2021, Emory started receiving the first produce from these farms
In 2020, Emory received a
national grant from the EPA to establish an on-campus prototype for an
anaerobic digester. This cutting-edge technology can turn food waste into biogas (renewable energy) and soil amendments (agricultural use).
Last fall, Emory
hosted leaders of the Muscogee Nation and adopted an
official land acknowledgment as early steps toward honoring the Indigenous peoples as the original inhabitants and stewards of the land on which Emory now sits. Important work still lies ahead to create a university community that is more inclusive of Native and Indigenous perspectives, learning, and scholarship, as well as to provide respectful stewardship of the land.
The WaterHub at Emory is a water recycling system that uses eco-engineering processes to clean wastewater for future non-potable uses like heating and cooling buildings and flushing toilets. Installed in 2015, it was the first system of its kind in the US and now recycles up to 400,000 gallons of water daily.
PASSIONATE ABOUT CREATING A MORE SUSTAINABLE PLANET? Join the Emory Alumni Environmental Network, which connects alumni who share an interest in preserving our environment. Led by alumni Mae Bowen 16C, Amy Hou 15Ox 17C, and Taylor McNair 16B, the network provides learning experiences, networking events, and service opportunities year-round. Learn more at www.alumni.emory.edu/groups/eaen.html.