Skip to Content
Report an accessibility problem

Sustainability Viewpoints

October 7, 2008

Many of you have heard me talk about how our strength is in all the people across the University helping to make our sustainability goals a reality.  We have three main goals – Carbon Neutrality, Zero Waste (water, solid waste), and Active Engagement.  Of those three – active engagement is the most important – we have 80,000 change agents in our small city called ASU – every one of us has a role to play. We have change agents who have already joined in, helping us to pave the way for future accomplishment. You will find them in the Purchasing, Facilities Management, ASU Dining Services, Parking and Transit, Student Affairs and in other “non-traditional areas” such as University Student Government, WP Carey School of Business, the School of Music and the Theater Department – the list goes on.

To better connect all of us – and as a way to champion our efforts and engage others – Sustainability in Action was created as an easy to use tool and resource designed especially for those within or closely tied to ASU’s purchasing and operations areas. I look forward to growing our reach and sharing impacts and ideas on our collective interest in furthering sustainability at ASU.

Bonny Bentzin

Manager, Sustainability Business Practices

Acceptable recyclables at the Downtown Phoenix campus

October 6, 2008

PAPER

- Newspapers

- Brown Paper Bags

- Chipboard: cereal boxes, shoe boxes, etc. – remove plastic liners

- Corrugated Cardboard – remove plastic wrappers and flatten

- Magazines and catalogs

- Phonebooks

- Printing and Writing paper

- Paperback books

- Junk Mail – envelope windows and labels are OK, remove other non-paper items

- Other Paper – Pamphlets, brochures, file folders, card stock, etc.

PLASTIC

- Plastic (PETE) Bottles (narrow neck) – soda, water, etc., No trays or baskets

- Plastic (HDPE) Bottles and jugs (narrow neck) – milk, water, juice,

liquid detergents, shampoo, etc. No hazardous material containers*

ALUMINUM

- Aluminum Cans

- Steel/Tin Cans – non-hazardous empty aerosol cans are OK.

Please no other steel.

- Milk Cartons and Drink Boxes

*hazardous materials include pesticides, herbicides, automotive fluids, pool chemicals, etc.

Cathie Fox

Director, Facilities Management

ASU’s Graphic Information Solutions granted FSC certification

October 6, 2008

Graphics Information Solutions (GIS), Arizona State University’s Education and Production print laboratory, has announced that it has achieved Certification from the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). “We are proud to have reached this milestone, continuing our commitment to sustainability in all activities” said Mike Chiricuzio, Director of GIS, adding “Catherine Skoglund and the GIS Team have once again shown the initiative and leadership that keeps our program on the leading edge.”

GIS invested significant time and over $10,000 in financial resources in this effort, following the overall ASU goal of sustainability as stated by Arizona State University President, Michael M. Crow, “Sustainability is the simple idea that, as human beings, we place a high value on our own quality of life and that of future generations. To be sustainable, our actions must reflect what is important to us – qualities such as clean air, clean water, health, security and prosperity.”

Catherine Skoglund, Manager of Operations and Business Development at GIS notes several key milestones and accomplishments in this effort, “We were certified by Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) on July 23, 2008 and Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified on July 25, 2008” adding “ASU Stationery products will proudly carry the message of our certification with the addition of the FSC logo to our ASU watermark on our papers, which are now printed on 100% post consumer recycled paper.”

Dr. Thomas Schildgen, Chair for the Department of Technology Management at ASU is the driving force behind this and all other accomplishments of GIS. Dr. Schildgen comments “The GIS program is yet another example of ASU’s growth as a New American University. GIS is totally self-funded through the provision of business systems print production exclusively for ASU internal clients while providing a hands-on laboratory for students, faculty and staff of the Graphics Communication program.”

Mike Chiricuzio

Director, Graphic Information Solutions

Zipcar provides an environmentally friendly and cost-effective form of transportation

October 6, 2008

Are you looking for a way to help the environment and save money at the same time?

ASU Parking and Transit Services is committed to providing sustainable transportation solutions, and one such initiative is the car-sharing program, Zipcar, has been at ASU for the past year. Nine lowemission, fuel-efficient vehicles are parked on the Tempe campus for use by the ASU community, including a Civic Hybrid and a MINI Cooper. On August 4th, ASU expanded the Zipcar program to its Downtown Phoenix campus which now houses a Toyota Yaris in the University Center Garage.

Zipcar members have the option of reserving a vehicle for an hour, a day or even a weekend. Membership is just $35 a year for ASU students, faculty and staff. Rates start as low as $9 an hour and include free gas, free insurance, and free maintenance. Reservations can be made online and customers access the vehicle with their Zipcar membership card so there is no waiting for an attendant.

Zipcar is a great option for students living on campus without cars or those who take public transportation to campus but would like the flexibility to run errands during the day. It’s a convenient and cost-effective way to get to doctor appointments, go grocery shopping or take a weekend trip out of town. For more information or to sign up for a Zipcar membership, please visit zipcar.com/asu.

Karen Bielak

Information Specialist Parking & Transit

Co-mingled recycling is coming to the Downtown Phoenix campus

October 6, 2008

The DPC Facilities and Property Management team has found a way to overcome the space limitations and challenges of its campus footprint and introduce co-mingled recycling to the Downtown Phoenix campus. As part of an urban campus and vibrant downtown community, space is always a challenge and even more so when it comes to recycling. In April 2008, what started as a visibility effort for recycling, transformed into the introduction of a very visible and sustainable co-mingled recycling program for the campus with a novel idea from staff to flip the use of the trash compactors.

While less than visible efforts for recycling were already in place, we found that the bulk of what was being disposed of as trash were items that were recyclable. When the campus opened, we decided that compactors were the most cost efficient method to dispose of trash. Some buildings already had them, new buildings were being designed to accommodate them and plans to convert the balance of the buildings were put in place. Not in hind sight, but we built an infrastructure that would allow for a quick conversion of the primary use of compactors to be for co-mingled recycling rather than trash.

New recycle containers designed to be colored and labeled for paper, plastic and aluminum have been distributed throughout the DPC buildings in the corridors, vending and staff service areas. Blue desk side containers were distributed to offices/work stations that did not already have them. Even though the program is co-mingled, having bins that separate recyclable items helps to minimize the contamination from other waste that typically happens with the one container–recycle all concept, and educates the community at large of what can be recycled and what is actually trash.

Janitorial staff will empty the new containers and pick up desk side once a week as a start, in addition to regular trash pickup, making it easy for staff and faculty to participate. Smaller secondary dumpsters will be used for trash at buildings that do not have a second compactor. We anticipate an overall cost savings for the conversion as fees are less for recycling pick ups, we reduce the volume of trash that is being disposed and are working with one vendor for both trash and recycling.

We chose to make a strategic investment in recycling to further the sustainability efforts of ASU and the Downtown Phoenix campus. The co-mingled recycling program at the DPC will be fully operational by October 1, 2008.

Cathie Fox

Director Facilities Management

PolyHarvest CSA

October 6, 2008

The PolyHarvest CSA is a community supported agriculture program that provides fresh, local, organic produce to community members here at ASU’s Polytechnic campus. Students, staff, faculty, and others in surrounding communities all participate by purchasing shares of produce from Crooked Sky Farms, then stopping by every Thursday at Polytechnic’s student union to pick up their share of great produce! By purchasing a “share” of produce in advance, members provide the farm with the financial security required to run farm operations. In return, members receive high quality, local produce and have a chance to become familiar with the source of their food.

Christopher Wharton

Asst Professor/ASUP Nutrition

Purchasing efforts towards sustainability

October 6, 2008

In an effort to reduce the adverse environmental impact of our purchasing decisions, we have developed “Green Purchasing Policies & Procedures." With these policies we seek alternatives to products and processes which are detrimental to the environment by using more environmentally friendly products and processes. We are stimulating demand for these environmentally friendly products by letting manufacturers and suppliers know the environmental performance we expect in products. Please go to our website for more information.

Gina Webber

Associate Director Purchasing & Business Services

CAP LTER Studies a Flood Basin

October 1, 2008

School of Life Sciences graduate student Libby Larson experimentally floods a stormwater retention basin at a north Phoenix elementary school in order to better understand nitrogen fluxes and transformations. A ubiquitous feature in the Phoenix metropolitan landscape, stormwater retention basins concentrate water, nutrients, and pollutants and thus can be important places for improving stormwater quality and recharging groundwater, but may also be sources of greenhouse gases.

Continue Reading

Arizona's Largest Building Mounted PV Project at ASU

September 30, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO and WUXI, China, Sept. 30 /Xinhua-PRNewswire/ -- Suntech Power Holdings Co., Ltd. (NYSE: STP - News), one of the world's leading manufacturers of photovoltaic cells and modules, today announced it has been selected to supply 1.6 megawatt (MW) of solar panels to Sun Devil Solar LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Integrys Energy Services, for its project with Arizona State University (ASU). The project will be installed on top of two elevated parking structures in the middle of the ASU's main campus using an innovating tracking system. The solar installations are to be completed by the end of 2008.

Continue Reading

ReGeneration Roadtrip: Degrees of Sustainability

September 29, 2008

Living and learning at Arizona State University's School of Sustainability

The folks at Arizona State University's Global Institute of Sustainability really rolled out the red green carpet for Sarah and me when we met them on a hot Friday afternoon. Through conversations with the school's key players and highly personalized tours of their facilities and features, they walked us through every step the university has taken to join the ranks of the world's leading environmental pioneers and thinkers.

> Read more

ASU's School of Sustainability Honored

September 12, 2008

Contributions help environment, life in Valley, group says

Arizona Republic

When Pinal County sought advice on managing its growth, students from Arizona State University's School of Sustainability reviewed the landscape from a helicopter and offered scenarios to guide planning.

> Read more

ASU and Grist.org Team Up to Provide Students with News on Sustainability and Green Living

September 8, 2008

Download the press release as a PDF.

PHOENIX, AZ, and SEATTLE, WA — In the first collaboration of its kind, Arizona State University and Grist.org, the country's leading source of online environmental news and information, today announced an agreement to send all of ASU's 60,000+ students and many faculty and staff a biweekly e-mail with news, commentary, and advice about sustainability issues.

Continue Reading

Econews Site Teams Up With ASU

September 8, 2008

NEWSWEEK

Arizona State University has often stood out for its efforts to be ecofriendly. Since launching the country's first school of sustainability in 2007, the large college—about 60,000 students—has been praised by environmental groups as one of America's greenest universities. This week, the school will announce a partnership with Grist.org, an eccentric online magazine that critically and humorously covers environmental news, to deliver a biweekly e-mail newsletter to the campus with local and national reporting on sustainability. ASU president Michael Crow, who also heads a union of university presidents to reduce campus greenhouse gas emissions, spoke to NEWSWEEK's Daniel Stone about the school's efforts.

Read more at NEWSWEEK