1 / 30

University of Maryland Greenhouse Gas Inventory (FY 2002-2007)

University of Maryland Greenhouse Gas Inventory (FY 2002-2007). David Tilley Associate Professor Department of Environmental Science & Technology Affiliate, Center for Integrative Environmental Research. Kim Ross Executive Director Center for Integrative Environmental Research.

nathan
Télécharger la présentation

University of Maryland Greenhouse Gas Inventory (FY 2002-2007)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. University of Maryland Greenhouse Gas Inventory (FY 2002-2007) David Tilley Associate Professor Department of Environmental Science & Technology Affiliate, Center for Integrative Environmental Research Kim Ross Executive Director Center for Integrative Environmental Research Ramy Serour Research Assistant Center for Integrative Environmental Research Matthias Ruth Director Center for Integrative Environmental Research Roy F. Weston Chair in Natural Economics

  2. Greenhouse Gas InventoryAcknowledgements GHG Inventory Taskforce • David Allen, Director, Department of Transportation Services • Karen Breen, Director, Department of Business Services • Maureen Kotlas, Director, Department of Environmental Safety • Joan Kowal, Energy Manager, Department of Financial Services • Heather Lair, Project Manager, Office of Sustainability • Scott Lupin, Director, Office of Sustainability and Associate Director, Department of Environmental Safety • Harry Teabout, Director, Department of Buildings & Landscape Services • John Vucci, Associate Director, HVAC Systems

  3. Greenhouse Gas InventoryAcknowledgements Cooperators to the GHG Inventory Taskforce • Jim Hope, Utilities Information Manager, Financial Services • Catherine Doyer, Business Manager, Financial Services • Chuck Edwards, Energy Plant director • Kevin Curtis, Environmental Safety • David Davitaia, Assistant Director of Operations DOTS • Jerry Joy, Manager Admin. & Maintenance Support, B & LS • Chris Leween, IT Coordinator DOTS • Don St. Armand, Shuttle Coordinator DOTS • Nicola Corbin, Manager of Marketing & Public Affairs DOTS • Lindsay Callahan, UMCP barn manager • Bill Monan, Assistant Director Bldg & Landscapes • Karen Petroff, Nutrient Manager Bldg & Landscapes • Jeremy Menna, Assistant Manager of Operations (ICA) • George Long, Manager Golf Course Grounds

  4. Greenhouse Gas InventoryAcknowledgements Cooperators to the GHG Inventory Taskforce • Chris Banko, Allied Waste • John Belushi, Annapolis Junction • Edward Brown, Residential Facilities and Building Systems • Terry Brenner, Facilities Planning • Pat Dollar, Manager Solid Waste and Recycling • Sandra Dykes, Assistant Director Administrative Services B & LS • Darryl Flick, Prince Georges Waste Management, Brown Station • Kurt Flick, Research Analyst • Ken Gertz, Associate Vice President for Research Development • Carol Hearle, Campus Environmental Planner • Erin Iverson, Manager, Office of Extended Studies • Aleksey Molokin, Student Supervisor Facilities Maintenance • James Pence, Zone Supervision HVAC Systems • Brenda Testa, Director Facilities Planning • Greg Thompson, Assistant Director Dining Services Maintenance

  5. Greenhouse Gas InventoryOutline UMD College Park • Climate Commitment • Carbon Inventory • Climate Action Plan

  6. Greenhouse Gas Inventory UMD College Park • Climate Commitment • Carbon Inventory • Climate Action Plan

  7. Greenhouse Gas Inventory UMD College Park • Climate Commitment • Carbon Inventory • Climate Action Plan

  8. Greenhouse Gas InventoryClimate Commitment • ACUPCC • Spring 2007: Signature of Commitment • By November 15, 2007: • Create Institutional Structure to Guide Plan Development and Implementation • By November 15, 2008: • Complete GHG Inventory • Update Biannually • By November 15, 2009: • Plan for Climate Neutrality

  9. Greenhouse Gas InventoryClimate Commitment • ACUPCC • Early Action • Make climate and sustainability part of curriculum and student experience • Expand research on climate neutrality • Develop mechanisms to track progress • Start 2 or more of: • LEED Silver for new buildings • Energy Star appliances • Carbon Credits for Air Travel • Encourage Public Transportation • 15% of Electricity Renewable Sources • Sustainable & Climate-friendly Investing by UM-Foundation

  10. Greenhouse Gas InventoryClimate Commitment • ACUPCC • Early Action • Reporting • Year 1: GHG Inventory • Year 2: Climate Action Plan • Year 3 and Alternating Years: • GHG Inventory and • Climate Action Plan Progress Report

  11. Greenhouse Gas InventoryApproach • Establish GHG Inventory Taskforce • Set Scope • Define Boundary • Use Clean Air Cool Planet Carbon Calculator (standardized, comparison) • Learn from Other Universities • Gather and Enter Data • Analysis, development of recommendations and report • Report posted online • Briefings to key leaders and stakeholders

  12. Greenhouse Gas InventoryScope

  13. Greenhouse Gas InventoryBoundary • Definition I: Exclude Space Not in Maryland • Definition II: Exclude Space that we neither own nor pay for electricity • Buildings/operations where UMD is tenant • Graduate Hills & Gardens • ‘Graham Cracker’ Sorority houses • South Commons • Ground leases • UMUC • USM Shady Grove 275 buildings representing 12.7 million square feet of building space: College Park buildings, Maryland Fire & Rescue Institute facilities, Maryland Agriculture Experiment Station state-wide

  14. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-Total GHG Emissions

  15. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-Total GHG Emissions by Source

  16. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-Major Sources of GHG Emissions

  17. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-FY 2007 GHG Emissions by source

  18. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-GHG Emissions Intensity

  19. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-Reasons for GHG Emissions Reduction Reason #1: Investment in Co-generation

  20. Greenhouse Gas InventoryFindings-Reasons for GHG Emissions Reduction Reason #2: More student housing (+2873 beds) Less student commuting (-1269 permits)

  21. Greenhouse Gas InventoryBenchmarking

  22. Greenhouse Gas InventoryBenchmarking FY 2004

  23. Greenhouse Gas InventoryProjections

  24. Greenhouse Gas InventoryRecommendations for Future GHG Inventories Future GHG inventories should… • Include a comprehensive commuter survey and model of commuting’s contribution; • Report monthly data for electricity consumption; • Capture emissions associated with purchased materials and supplies (e.g. paper, electronics, etc.); • Estimate Carbon offsets from UM forested lands.

  25. Greenhouse Gas InventoryNext Steps-Emissions Reduction Strategies Emissions Reduction Strategies Emissions 1990 present 20xx

  26. Greenhouse Gas InventoryNext Steps-Emissions Reduction Strategies Emissions Reduction Strategies Emissions Conservation Green Construction Power Plant and Distribution Efficiency Renewable Energy Carbon Offsets 1990 present 20xx

  27. Greenhouse Gas InventoryNext Steps-Emissions Reduction Strategies Emissions Reduction Strategies Emissions Conservation Green Construction Power Plant and Distribution Efficiency Renewable Energy Carbon Offsets 1990 present 20xx 20yy

  28. Climate Action Plan Elements • Power and Operations • Transportation • Campus Services and Activities • Administrative Policies • Education and Research • Outreach and In-reach • Financial Strategies

  29. Climate Action Plan • Compilation of action plan items • Dialog with the campus community • Quantification of emissions reduction potentials and cost • Identification of co-benefits • Identification of implementation mechanisms • Prioritization of actions • Implementation • Periodic updating

  30. For more information and full report visit www.cier.umd.edu

More Related