University of California
Passes
Ground-Breaking Clean Energy Policy
July 19, 2003
The University of California Board of Regents voted unanimously
today in favor of a Clean Energy and Green Building policy that
raises the bar for environmental leadership by any institution.
This vote follows a year long "UC Go Solar!"
campaign run by students across the state and Greenpeace. The
campaign called for the Regents to adopt a comprehensive Clean
Energy and Green Building policy to make UC a national leader
in environmental stewardship.
Since last September, students and faculty sent
more than 10,000 postcards to the university in support of the
campaign, VIPs including Lt. Governor Cruz M. Bustamente endorsed
it, and dozens of editorials have appeared in student newspapers
urging the Regents to take action.
"This victory for the environment is the product
of collaboration between Students, Faculty, Administrators, Regents
and Greenpeace," explained Kristin Casper, campaigner with
Greenpeace. "The UC's leadership will pave the way for campuses
across the U.S. toward a clean, sustainable future. Now there
is a clear road map for others to follow."
According to a Greenpeace study released today,
the combination of the Los Angeles Community College District's
pledge to generate 10% of new buildings' energy use with onsite
renewable energy, and this UC victory, the current
total amount of grid-connected solar power in the US could increase
by nearly 30% above today's levels. The study also notes that
it is academic institutions that are a driving force in building
a clean energy economy for our country. A full copy of the study
is available at http://www.cleanenergynow.org.
The University of California policy is a comprehensive
initiative that mandates:
- 10 megawatts (equivalent to power used by 5,000
homes) of renewable energy be installed across the 10 campuses
(currently only 40 MW of solar energy are grid-connected in
California and 52 MW total in the U.S.).
- The purchase of 10% of the university's utility
purchased energy from clean energy sources immediately and ramping
up to 20% by 2017, enough to power 26,000 homes.
- All new campus building across the state will
be built to green building standards (except acute care facilities)
- Reduction of system-wide energy use to 10%
below 2000 levels by 2014 in order to reduce consumption of
non-renewable energy sources.
Following the UC's lead, students on more than
50 campuses across the country are expected to launch Clean Energy
campaigns this fall, to inspire their schools to replicate the
UC system. The Greenpeace report shows that if every U.S. college
campus were to match the UC solar energy policy, the total grid-connected
solar installations in the United States would increase more than
50 fold. With this surge, prices of solar could be expected to
drop by some 23%, making it competitive with conventional, polluting
energies in many areas.
|