by Brianna Crandall — May 20, 2015—The Center for Green Schools at the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), through its USGBC Students program and in partnership with Lucid, the Alliance to Save Energy (ASE) and the National Wildlife Federation (NWF), has just announced the results of the Campus Conservation Nationals (CCN) 2015 competition.
In its fifth year, more than 343,000 students and staff across 125 colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada participated in CCN 2015, which reportedly saved the schools more than $290,000 in electricity and water in just three weeks. Over the five years of the competition, CCN participants have saved 6 million kilowatt hours (six GWh) of electricity, equivalent to averting more than 9 million pounds of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
From February 1 through April 30, 2015, students and staff competed to achieve the greatest reductions in their residence halls’ energy use over a three-week period. Students and staff used tactics such as direct action, real-time consumption dashboards and social media to motivate and encourage sustainable behaviors, proving that occupants play a critical role in greening their buildings.
By making commitments to turn off unused electronics, take shorter showers, use the stairs instead of the elevator, and other simple changes in behavior, students across the country demonstrated how individual actions could make a big collective difference in the way buildings consume electricity and water, points out USGBC.
The 10 schools with the largest overall percent reduction of electricity produced during the competition were (listed alphabetically):
- California State University – Chico (reduced electricity use by 30.6%)
- Concordia College
- Dickinson College
- Eastern Mennonite University
- Georgia State University
- Hofstra University
- Northwest Missouri State University
- Oklahoma State University
- San Diego State University
- Western Technical College
The five schools with the largest overall percent reduction in their water use during the competition were (listed alphabetically):
- Eastern Washington University (reduced water use by 19.8%)
- Oberlin College
- Pima Community College
- University of Nevada – Las Vegas
- Wake Forest University
During the competition, Lucid’s technology facilitated cross-departmental collaboration, with more than 50 percent of participants stating that CCN helped build new relationships between campus groups, such as facilities, sustainability, residence life and student leaders. Participating schools used Lucid’s BuildingOS platform to track electricity and water use and to share building performance and competition standings with students and staff.
“CCN opens the eyes of students and administrators alike to the potential of strong energy management,” said Chelsea Hodge, director of engagement programs at Lucid. “They realize that, wow, if we can achieve substantial reductions through just empowering individuals to change their behavior, then we can achieve equally large, or larger, savings by optimizing building operations, while saving money and improving comfort and productivity. CCN is a window into this potential.”
To learn more about the participants and the results of the competition, visit the Campus Conservation Nationals 2015 Web page.