2
EC Sustainability News | December 2011 Brought to you by the EC Sustainability Committee Recommendations may be sent to [email protected] Visit our website at http://public.elmhurst.edu/projects/sustainability News and Campus Initiatives Illinois Sustainable College and University Symposium The College was represented at the October 28, 2011 Sustainable College and University Symposium by two members of the Sustainability Committee. The purpose of attending was to learn about and meet with governmental, industrial and other higher education representatives to assist our efforts here at the College. Many schools are getting on board with sustainability programs, and the one here at Elmhurst appears to be a bit ahead in that our Sustainability Plan has been in place and is progressing toward goals set in 2009. It was great to see the enthusiasm in the student representative attending the symposium. Elmhurst College became a member of the Illinois Campus Sustainability Compact this past summer. Our recent meetings indicate that we are close to receiving the initial level award under this program in the months to come. Greening Your Home In response to the request from the senior leadership, the Sustainability Committee postponed its November 2nd Greening your Home presentation. It will be rescheduled early in Spring Term. Recommendations on Resource Conservation and Improved Recycling Any ideas you have to conserve resources, improve recycling or making our College environment better are welcomed by the Committee. Please email them to [email protected]. In this light, seemingly little things may matter. Initial results indicate that we used over 12,000,000 sheets of paper in the Fiscal Year 2011. The Committee will begin to look at paper usage in its November meeting, but perhaps we can all start now in being mindful of the paper we use. What You Can Do 1. Go to http://www.ewg.org/ourwater to get the scoop on how many chemicals are in our local drinking water. Check out Elmhurst 60126. 2. Dishwashers use one third less water than washing dishes by hand. 3. Tap water is equal or better than bottled water because bottled water is not regulated as strictly as tap water.

December 2011 - EC Sustainability Newsletters

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

December 2011 - EC Sustainability Newsletters

Citation preview

Page 1: December 2011 - EC Sustainability Newsletters

EC Sustainability News | December 2011 Brought to you by the EC Sustainability Committee Recommendations may be sent to [email protected] Visit our website at http://public.elmhurst.edu/projects/sustainability

News and Campus Initiatives

Illinois Sustainable College and University Symposium The College was represented at the October 28, 2011 Sustainable College and University Symposium by two members of the Sustainability Committee. The purpose of attending was to learn about and meet with governmental, industrial and other higher education representatives to assist our efforts here at the College. Many schools are getting on board with sustainability programs, and the one here at Elmhurst appears to be a bit ahead in that our Sustainability Plan has been in place and is progressing toward goals set in 2009. It was great to see the enthusiasm in the student representative attending the symposium. Elmhurst College became a member of the Illinois Campus Sustainability Compact this past summer. Our recent meetings indicate that we are close to receiving the initial level award under this program in the months to come. Greening Your Home In response to the request from the senior leadership, the Sustainability Committee postponed its November 2nd Greening your Home presentation. It will be rescheduled early in Spring Term. Recommendations on Resource Conservation and Improved Recycling Any ideas you have to conserve resources, improve recycling or making our College environment better are welcomed by the Committee. Please email them to [email protected]. In this light, seemingly little things may matter. Initial results indicate that we used over 12,000,000 sheets of paper in the Fiscal Year 2011. The Committee will begin to look at paper usage in its November meeting, but perhaps we can all start now in being mindful of the paper we use.

What You Can Do

1. Go to http://www.ewg.org/ourwater to get the scoop on how many chemicals are in our

local drinking water. Check out Elmhurst 60126. 2. Dishwashers use one third less water than washing dishes by hand. 3. Tap water is equal or better than bottled water because bottled water is not regulated as

strictly as tap water.

Page 2: December 2011 - EC Sustainability Newsletters

4. An open faucet will let out 5 gallons (19 liters) of water every 2 minutes. 5. A faucet that drips once every second can add up to 8 gallons (30 liters) per day, 56 gallons

(210 liters) per week, 3,000 gallons (11,000 liters) per year. Seven ways to save the seas (Submitted by an Elmhurst College student, from the May 2011 edition of Popular Science, page 46): 1. Stop filling them with poison. Synthetic fertilizer draining from farmland has helped create

405 near-lifeless patches of ocean worldwide. Fertilizer and sewage generate the growth of algae, which, when it eventually dies, asphyxiates surrounding marine life.

2. Put a price on carbon. A tax of just $12.50 per ton of CO2 would reduce carbon emission by

30 percent, keeping 214 million tons of pollution out of the ocean. 3. Repair the water cycle. A “perpetual salt fountain” could pull relatively fresh, nutrient-rich

water from the deep ocean to the surface, creating oases in the middle of marine deserts. 4. Curb species invasions. In general, they can be compared as toothpaste out of a tube. You

can’t stuff it back in. Same with invasive species that can result from improper release of ballast water of over 100,000 commercial liners that sail to the US each year.

5. Rescue coral reefs. Ninety percent of Australian and Indonesian reefs are threatened by

bleaching. Possible use of bacteriophages, bacteria killing viruses, may be part of the solution.

6. Fish smarter. New technologies, including hooks, are being developed to reduce, and

eventually eliminate, bycatching. 7. Increase your knowledge.