麻豆传媒

 

Sustainable accomplishments

Dal Office of Sustainability

- April 12, 2012

Rochelle Owen (right) leads a tour of the LeMarchant Street house deconstruction project earlier this year. (Nick Pearce photo)
Rochelle Owen (right) leads a tour of the LeMarchant Street house deconstruction project earlier this year. (Nick Pearce photo)

Listen to Rochelle Owen discuss the work of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Office of Sustainability and you may wonder if she ever sleeps.

This past Wednesday, she hosted a 鈥渟ustainability celebration鈥 to highlight the extensive work that her office has undertaken over the past school year: lighting projects, Ecolympics, a fridge replacement program, water and energy savings, natural environment reviews, transportation planning鈥he list went on and on.

She has help, though: more than 50 students worked with the office this year alone, in a variety of different roles. Some projects, like the natural environment plan documenting the campus鈥 flora and landscaping, are almost entirely student driven. Students also take on leadership roles: seven students, for example, sit on the President鈥檚 Advisory Council on Sustainability and its subcommittees.

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 do this work without students,鈥 said Ms. Owen. 鈥淭heir research, their guidance and their leadership are crucial to our ongoing projects.鈥

Fridge exchanges, bike racks and energy savings


In her presentation, Ms. Owen highlighted some of the office鈥檚 results from the past year. Remember the fridge exchange program, for example? With the support of Efficiency Nova Scotia, the Office of Sustainability replaced 491 fridges and freezers on campus, at no cost to individual units. The project will save 麻豆传媒 more than $26,000 each year and reduce the university鈥檚 CO2 output by 220 tonnes.

The oldest fridge that was replaced belonged to 麻豆传媒 biologist Ron O鈥橠or, who received a special prize at the event for the honour. Just how old was the fridge?

鈥淕E doesn鈥檛 even know,鈥 he laughed, saying that the model may date back to the 1940s. 鈥淚t鈥檚 older than I am, for sure.鈥

Other successes highlighted include the addition of 272 new bike rack spots on campus, reaching the planned target for CO2 emission reduction a year ahead of schedule thanks to the move to natural gas, and a research project during the demolition of houses on LeMarchant Street to make way for the new mixed-use residence.

Three of those houses diverted 84 per cent of materials from the landfill, exceeding the LEED gold standard of 75 per cent. For the fourth house, Dal used a unique deconstruction technique that diverted 90 per cent of waste, and will be sharing its results with the provincial government to identify ways that such a method could be made more feasable and cost-effective for other projects.

Celebrating successes


At the event, Ms. Owen also presented prizes for the winners of the Residence Ecolympics and the ReThink Sustainability Teams鈥 Challenge. The former went to Gerrard Hall, which conserved both the most energy and water (23,000 litres' worth) during the two-week event. And for the third straight year, the Killam Library won the ReThink award, with initiatives including a waste diversion project with environmental science students and making sustainability kits available for patrons to check out.

Future projects for the Office of Sustainability include a major lighting retrofit getting underway this summer, and sustainability assessments of 麻豆传媒 Food Services鈥 seven commercial-sized kitchens on campus. The office also hopes to complete final approvals on its Institutional Cycling Master Plan (in cooperation with other universities and local hospitals) and launch employee bus program with Metro Transit.

For the latest on the activities of the Office of Sustainability, or more detail on its programs, .