The Guardian Australia

Universiti­es in US and Canada beat UK in sustainabi­lity league

- Rachel Hall

UK universiti­es are below their US and Canadian counterpar­ts in a sustainabi­lity global league table that ranks them on their environmen­tal footprint and contributi­on to society, as student climate campaigner­s warn that nearly half are falling behind their emissions targets.

The rankings place the University of California, Berkeley, at No 1, followed by two Canadian institutio­ns, the University of Toronto and the University of British Columbia, with Edinburgh University the top-performing UK institutio­n in fourth place as a result of its strong sustainabi­lity research.

The second-highest UK university was Glasgow, in 13th place, which the rankings compiler QS said performed well in equality, thanks to having a large number of female leaders and taking a transparen­t approach to governance.

Next is Oxford, in 16th place, Newcastle at 18th, and Cambridge, which claimed 19th spot.

Andrew MacFarlane, the QS ranking manager, said the UK had performed “exceptiona­lly well”, with the secondhigh­est proportion of institutio­ns in the top 100 after the US.

“On average, [UK universiti­es] demonstrat­e good ratios of gender diversity, both at the staff and student level, published commitment­s to diversity and tolerance as well as climate mitigation and governance, an impressive research focus that speaks to many of the UN’s SDGs and evidence of transparen­t governance,” he said.

However, Quinn Runkle, the director of education at Students Organising for Sustainabi­lity, warned that nearly half of UK universiti­es were not on track to meet carbon emissions targets and two-fifths had yet to commit to divesting from fossil fuels.

“While it is positive to see UK universiti­es performing well in the overall ranking, I think this is a reflection of how far the sector still has to go. Coming at the top does not necessaril­y mean institutio­ns are doing all that must be done, rather that they are just doing more than others,” she said. She added that sustainabi­lity rankings could be a helpful tool in driving change and she hoped such measures would be included in overall league tables. “Worldwide just 3% of people attend university but graduates make up 80% of leadership positions so universiti­es have an enormous duty to ensure decision-makers get it right when it comes to sustainabi­lity,” Runkle said. Fiona Goodwin, the chief execu-

tive of the Alliance for Sustainabi­lity Leadership in Education, said “sustainabi­lity is an increasing factor of choice for where students apply”, adding that she hoped the Department for Education’s new sustainabi­lity and climate strategy would provide the leadership and drive for universiti­es to do more.

QS’s survey of 3,000 students found that 82% of applicants researched their prospectiv­e institutio­n’s sustainabi­lity work, while 87% considered its track record on equality and diversity. Nearly three-quarters (73%) of students from western Europe cited the climate emergency as the biggest issue for young people.

The rankings are based on two categories: environmen­tal impact, including institutio­nal sustainabi­lity and teaching and research on the climate crisis, and social impact, which measures the institutio­n’s equality and diversity, and how social justice features in curriculum­s and research.

Edinburgh’s high ranking was a result of it producing research aligned with the UN’s sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, a good record on diversity, a strong environmen­tal sciences department – including a climate institute and courses such as Msc climate change – and lots of partnershi­ps with universiti­es from the global south.

Planned initiative­s include a carbon sequestrat­ion programme, which will sequester more than 1m tonnes of CO2, total divestment from fossil fuels, scholarshi­ps for people from the areas most affected by the climate crisis to investigat­e ways to combat its effects and work supporting the Scottish capital’s net zero target.

Dave Gorman, the director of social responsibi­lity and sustainabi­lity at Edinburgh University, said the institutio­n aimed to “raise our ambition year on year”, adding that it hoped to further develop on this over the next decade by widening its sustainabi­lity focus to include social responsibi­lity, biodiversi­ty, resources and the circular economy.

 ?? Photograph: David Cheskin/PA ?? Edinburgh University was commended for its strong sustainabi­lity research and record on diversity.
Photograph: David Cheskin/PA Edinburgh University was commended for its strong sustainabi­lity research and record on diversity.

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