The greenest colleges? Harvard, UNH, and Maine's Atlantic top list
By Tracy Jan, Globe staff
Harvard pledged this month to slash its greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent by 2016. The University of New Hampshire became the first school in the nation this year to use landfill methane gas as its prime energy source. And the College of the Atlantic in Maine plans to open "green" dormitories, with composting toilets, in August.
Colleges across the country are rolling out a host of new environmentally friendly initiatives, expanding beyond campus recycling and energy efficient buildings to hire sustainability officers to oversee all environmental programs. The push coincides with the rise of “green college” rankings, and as the schools use their new policies and practices as a fresh recruiting tool for students who came of age during "An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore's popular documentary about global warming.
"The current generation of students wants to go to schools that take their environmental responsibility seriously," said Julian Dautremont-Smith, associate director of the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education, based in Lexington, Ky. "In the last two or three years it’s really picked up past some sort of tipping point.''
The rising fervor around environmental initiatives has launched Harvard, UNH, and the College of the Atlantic into the ranks of the nation's top "green" colleges, a new category in Princeton Review's "Best 368 Colleges" being released Tuesday.
The three colleges are among the 11 that received a top rating, a list that includes two other New England schools: Bates College, in Lewiston, Maine, which started a Zipcar program and a bicycle co-op last year; and Yale University, which generates 50 percent of the power for a divinity school dorm from solar panels and plans to add solar technology to other buildings next school year.
More than ever, prospective students are judging colleges on their environmental stewardship along with the the traditional rankings of academics, dorm food, and the party scene, said Rob Franek, vice president of Princeton Review and the annual book's author. In the Review’s latest survey, 63 percent of college applicants and their parents said they wanted more information about a college’s commitment to the environment; a quarter of them said it would strong impact their decision to apply or attend a school.
“Students are exposed to sustainability initiatives at a younger age,” so they expect the same from their undergraduate schools, and colleges feel obliged to make them available,” Franek said.
Colleges are eyeing each other’s initiatives as the green movement, once isolated to the edges of campus life where students living in co-ops would grow their own vegetables and compost waste, goes mainstream and the schools scramble to outdo one another.
Harvard, with 24 full-time staff members carrying out its Green Campus Initiative, supports the largest university organization in the world devoted to sustainability work, said Leith Sharp, the program’s director.
Harvard pays cq its students to promote conservation efforts and holds an annual competition to honor the most Earth-friendly residence hall for recycling and reducing energy and water consumption. The winning dorm takes home the Green Cup, a trophy fashioned out of an old beer keg spray-painted forest green.
The conservation efforts, which include using the cold water setting when doing laundry, taking only what students think they will eat in the dining hall, and shutting windows in the winter – are paying off, saving the university at least $400,000 a year, Sharp said. Electricity use in undergraduate dorms decreased 15 percent within three years of the launching the initiative, and recycling increased by more than 30 percent, she said. Dining halls have seen a 33 percent reduction in food waste.
"About a year or two ago, we hit this critical mass within the university where the issue of greening the campus was no longer a fringe issue," Sharp said. "It became a central concern."
Harvard dining halls serve organic produce, compost food waste, and organize weekly farmers markets. And its recycling truck is fueled by waste-kitchen oil. The university also subsidizes half the cost of public transit passes for students and staff and rewards carpoolers with prime parking spots, while raising the price of on-campus parking. Those steps have resulted in a 10 percent reduction in single-occupant car trips in the last six years, she said.
Students have also pressured university leaders to stay at the forefront of the green curve. Harvard’s Environmental Action Committee, an undergraduate environmental advocacy and political group, got 4,500 students to sign a petition last winter urging President Drew Faust to expand teaching and research on climate, energy and sustainability, and commit to the bold greenhouse gas initiative.
"Students are used to seeing Harvard as a leader in most things,” said Zachary Arnold, a junior and co-chairman of the committee. “Without a strong commitment and active engagement with this issue, Harvard was in danger of losing its leadership."
Bay State schools that did not make Princeton Review's top green colleges cut this year tout recognitions in other rankings.
MIT ranked among the nation's top 25 schools in a recent report card issued by the Sustainable Endowments Institute. A rainwater harvesting system on the school's Cambridge campus cuts potable water use in half. And next year, the university expects to introduce renewable, plant-based biodiesel fuel for its fleet of vehicles. It is also studying the potential of mounting wind turbines on several campus buildings.
Interest in environmental sustainability has grown so much among MIT students that the university created grants of up to $20,000 last year to encourage students to pursue energy research such as mapping energy use in buildings across campus, said Steven Lanou, deputy director for environmental sustainability. The university, like several others, is also developing new courses addressing the issue.
Sierra Magazine, which bestowed the title of "original green school" on Tufts University for developing the nation's first university environmental policy in 1990, named the school one of the top 10 greenest schools in the country last year. Dorms hold a month-long energy conservation competition called "Do It In the Dark!" An electric tractor mows Tufts’ organic baseball field. Electric vehicles deliver campus mail.
“The rankings themselves bring credibility to the issue and will push students to think about this in their selection criteria,” said Sarah Hammond Creighton, director of Tufts’ office of sustainability.
Tracy Jan can be reached at tjan@globe.com
Readers, what do you think of these rankings and their value? Which is the greenest college of them all, and why? Have your say in our comments section below.



No mention of the greenest college in the country - Oberlin College? Ask the Sierra Club, the Princeton Review, which school is the greenest. According to SC, Oberlin is #1.
The trophy for greenest dorm is a can *spray painted* green? Oh the irony.
How about Middlebury? Princeton left them unranked because it said they did not provide information -- but Princeton never ASKED them for information -- PR is notoriously sloppy and these rankings are meaningless -- anyone can fill out their 'survey of students' and comment on any college -- not very scientific or can't even be categorized as anecdata!
It's great to see more colleges building green buildings. But Northland College in Wisconsin build a residence hall with composting toilets, wind and solar electric generation, and many other green features in 2000.
I'm happy to see that College of the Atlantic made the list but even happier that this is in the main stream press at all - this is good news for all of us. There are at least 50 schools that are making commendable efforts to get greener. I recall that the Sierra Club ranking dropped the 5 highest rankedschools (Oberlin, Middlebury, COA., etc.) off their last study and put them in a category of their own.
If the Ivy League announced that they were going "anti-green" and engaged in all-sorts of eco-unfriendly practices, would there be any drop whatsoever in the number of overachieving social climbers willing to sell their left arm to get accepted to them?
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