{"id":2370,"date":"2007-01-26T02:29:00","date_gmt":"2007-01-26T02:29:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/sustainablog.greenoptions.com\/2007\/01\/26\/the-grades-are-in-the-college-sustainability-report-card\/"},"modified":"2007-01-26T02:29:00","modified_gmt":"2007-01-26T02:29:00","slug":"the-grades-are-in-the-college-sustainability-report-card","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sustainablog.org\/articles\/the-grades-are-in-the-college-sustainability-report-card\/","title":{"rendered":"The Grades are In: The College Sustainability Report Card"},"content":{"rendered":"

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I’ve focused a lot on sustainability efforts at colleges<\/a> and universities<\/a> around North America over the past few years, so I was pretty excited when Mark Orlowski, the founder and executive director of the Sustainable Endowments Institute<\/a>, got in touch with me about the upcoming College Sustainability Report Card<\/a> (in PDF) they were releasing. I figured I’d have a good idea of who’d be on top, and who would need to repeat Sustainability 101.<\/p>\n

The Report Card, released on Wednesday, isn’t just measure of efforts schools are taking to green their campuses, though; as it’s name implies, the Sustainable Endowments Institute is also interested in how colleges and universities are investing the money in their endowments. So, they focused on the top 100 schools in terms of their endowment funds: all together, these schools have over $258 billion dollars. In determining the grades for each university, the Institute didn’t just look at the issues we’d expect, such as green building, food and recycling, and climate change and energy policies; they also took into account endowment transparency, shareholder engagement, and investment priorities.<\/p>\n

This combination of priorities made for some really interesting results:<\/p>\n