1050 universities and colleges from 68 countries have pledged to half their emissions by 2030 and reach net-zero by 2050 at the very latest, impacting over 10 million students, was announced on 28th October at the Times Higher Education Climate Impact Forum, showing the education sector’s leadership ahead of COP26 in Glasgow, UK.
Universities and colleges from across the globe have signed up to the Race to Zero for Universities and Colleges, which is an initiative led by EAUC – The Alliance for Sustainability Leadership in Education and Second Nature with support from the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).
The role of the education sector in the global Race to Zero is substantial. Universities and colleges are setting a good example for their students and have the power to shift mindsets, influence lifestyle choices and instil sustainability values and green skills into the leaders of tomorrow. Universities and colleges can influence staff, faculty, students and the surrounding campus community. Setting progressive sustainability targets can have far-reaching impacts well beyond the walls of the institution. Universities are hubs for research and innovation which could scale up the role of higher education in the green transition.
UK high-level Climate Champion Nigel Topping said:
“Higher education institutions have the power to redesign the future. Not only are universities, colleges and schools committing to ambitious decarbonisation plans; these institutions also have the capacity - and indeed the responsibility - to support and educate our leaders of tomorrow. It's fantastic to see so many higher education institutions joining Race to Zero and I urge those who are not yet in to commit and take action now."
Ambitious new commitments for 2030 or sooner from institutions include a commitment from the Chiba University of Commerce to become the first university in Japan to run exclusively on renewable energy before 2025, as well as to establish the "Renewable Energy University League of Japan." The University of Glasgow was the first university in the UK to declare it would divest from fossil fuels and plan to be net-zero by 2030, while the University of Toronto, Canada commits to develop an ambitious low-carbon action plan by 2030, with strategies ranging from energy-efficient buildings and carbon-capture schemes to forest management strategies, and collaborations to test green technologies.
With 334 institutions from the United States, 216 from India to 125 from the United Kingdom committing ahead of COP26, we still have a long way in ensuring all universities and colleges across the world are taking action.
“More than think-tanks the world needs action-platforms for climate mitigation as time is running out. The network of action-platforms are institutionalised where they matter the most, namely, at the University Campus”, said Dr Rajendra Shende, ‘Not Zero Net Zero’ pledge, which is part of the Race to Zero.
Susan Gardner, Director of the Ecosystems Division at UNEP said:
“The higher education system oversees significant resources in human and financial capital, and how they deploy it can have a real impact on the planet. It is inspiring to see universities and colleges play a positive role in transitioning their institutions to being net zero and nature positive. Young people want to attend universities and colleges that are driving the environmental agenda forward, now the challenge is to scale this great work up from the progressive few to a standard procedure for all.”
The Times Higher report, released today, on The Race to Net Zero – How Global Universities are Performing highlights whilst there is a growing concern for sustainability amongst institutional leaders, climate action is still limited with the world’s top research universities not having the most ambitious plans to reach net-zero.
Iain Patton, CEO of EAUC said:
“As anchor, catalytic and cross-sector collaboration builders in our communities, institutions must take on a societal climate leadership role. It is our universities and colleges which have to be at the forefront of zero-carbon innovation, researching circular and clean production, teaching green skills and demonstrating innovative fossil-free campuses. The profile of universities and colleges committing to emissions reduction and net zero has never been higher. But with commitment, comes accountability and the Race to Zero brings this - allowing students to hold their institutions to account.”
Tim Carter, President of Second Nature said:
“Climate change is the greatest environmental challenge facing humanity. Colleges and universities play a vital role in helping solve the climate crisis, because, like other sectors, they have committed to institutional net zero goals. Beyond that, however, the sector enables climate actions in other sectors that share these goals. Higher education does this through research, community engagement, student activity, and aligned advocacy. It is through both acting and enabling action that the whole of higher education’s assets can be mobilized to address the challenge we are facing and why the participation of the higher education sector in the Race to Zero is so important.”
Notes to editors
Contact: Fiona Goodwin, fgoodwin@eauc.org.uk
About the Race to Zero for Universities and Colleges
EAUC are the secretariat for the Race to Zero for Universities and Colleges. An official partner of the Race to Zero campaign run by UNFCCC (https://racetozero.unfccc.int/). This initiative is a partnership of EAUC, Second Nature and UNEP. For more information, visit https://www.educationracetozero.org/.
About the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
UNEP is the leading global voice on the environment. It provides leadership and encourages partnership in caring for the environment by inspiring, informing and enabling nations and peoples to improve their quality of life without compromising that of future generations.
UNEP@50: A time to reflect on the past and envision the future
The 1972 United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm, Sweden, was the first-ever UN conference with the word “environment” in its title. The creation of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) was one of the most visible outcomes of this conference of many firsts. UNEP was created quite simply to be the environmental conscience of the UN and the world. Activities taking place through 2022 will look at significant progress made as well as what’s ahead in decades to come.
About the EAUC – The Alliance for Sustainability Leadership in Education
EAUC is the alliance for sustainability leadership in education. EAUC represents over 200 institutions with a combined total of 2 million students and nearly 400,000 staff with a spending budget of over £25 billion. We help leaders, academics and professionals to drive sustainability to the heart of their post-16 education institutions. EAUC also work on an international level with United Nations Environment and other UN bodies on several global education initiatives. EAUC are the secretariat for the Race to Zero for Universities and Colleges. For more information, visit www.eauc.org.uk and https://www.educationracetozero.org/.
About Second Nature
Second Nature is committed to accelerating climate action in, and through, higher education. This is accomplished by mobilizing a diverse array of higher education institutions to act on bold climate commitments, to scale campus climate initiatives, and to create innovative climate solutions. Second Nature aims to align, amplify, and bridge the sector’s efforts with other global leaders to advance urgent climate priorities. Visit Secondnature.org.