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Invitation to COP 17 in Durban, South Africa

York University's Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS: http://www.irisyorku.ca/) would like to invite proposals for presentations from researchers in the Canadian North and South (especially students/youth) to be part of our application to host a COP 17 Side Event. The main objectives of the workshop/side event would be to provide researchers from the Canadian North/South a chance to share their experiences and understanding of climate change whether in their daily lives or through their research. The focus is on climate change and health research; however, the goal is to 'share experiences' broadly related to the impacts people are facing everyday.

Why York University?

York University currently has observer status for COP 17 (Durban, South Africa - Nov 2011) and would like to send a delegation of students from York and from across the Arctic. IRIS representatives have attended both COP15 (Copenhagen, Denmark) and COP16 (Cancun, Mexico). Delegates' previous experiences and involvement have included: presentations at Klimaforum, COP Side Events and other academic seminars; published media and journal articles; and, the formation of international research partnerships.

What About the Cost?

A proposal is being prepared to send to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) to request money to host a workshop as a side event at the COP 17 meeting. The main theme of the proposed workshop will be: "'Our Actions Have Consequences': Student Perspectives on Climate Change and Health from the North."

Highlights...

As part of the proposals to SSHRC and for a COP Side Event, IRIS has been granted permission to include a screening of the film "Qapirangajuq: Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change," co-directed by acclaimed Inuk filmmaker Zacharias Kunuk and Dr. Ian Mauro.

For more information about the film please see this link: http://www.isuma.tv/hi/en/inuit-knowledge-and-climate-change

The Process

The timeline for securing funding and then to submit a full Side Event application will be:

  1. April 25: Deadline to send title/abstract (150 words) to Rachel Hirsch (rhirsch@yorku.ca) indicating interest in presenting at the proposed workshop/side event
  2. May 2: Final deadline for application to SSHRC for workshop funding
  3. August 16-19: Application window for COP 17 Side Events

Contact:
Rachel Hirsch, PhD
Postdoctoral Fellow
Faculty of Environmental Studies
HNES 276, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M3J 1P3
Mobile: 647-385-1811
Office: 416 736 2100 ex. 20147
Fax: 416-736-5679
Email: rhirsch@yorku.ca

Executive Board Member of IRIS, York University


Renewable Energy Opportunities: Would You Get Involved?

-- A 10-minute survey from Faculty of Environmental Studies Professor José Etcheverry and colleagues
-- Help inform the development of renewable energy opportunities at York!

Please visit https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/FY3RZPD to complete the survey online

- All York staff, librarians and faculty are invited to participate
- Those who provided their input previously are invited to revisit the survey as all prior submissions were lost
- Survey closes at midnight on Sunday, April 17, 2011

About the survey:
Ontario’s Green Energy and Green Economy Act, 2009 has helped support Ontario communities in developing renewable energy projects.
Professor José Etcheverry of York University’s Faculty of Environmental Studies and a number of the faculty’s graduate students are working to gain an understanding of the extent to which York faculty and staff are interested in participating and investing in a co-operative community renewable energy project. The survey will help the researchers and project administrators determine whether participation opportunities should be developed for the York community.


York’s 20-minute makeover will spruce up Keele and Glendon campuses

CSBO Notice:
York is participating in the City of Toronto's 20-minute makeover to mark Earth Day. Staff from Yorkwise and  CSBO have organized a targeted effort for the Keele campus on Friday, April 15, 2001 at 2pm.

The concept behind the makeover is simple – people are asked to stop what they are doing and get outside to clean up areas adjacent to their office or residence. Participants should dress appropriately for the weather and bring appropriate shoes or boots.

The Grounds Department in CSBO will provide work gloves and trash bags for litter pickup at the designated meeting spots on the Keele and Glendon campuses. The focus for this year's makeover will be these locations on the Keele campus:

  • Assiniboine and Passy Gardens Sportsfield
  • Arboretum
  • Boyer Woodlot
  • Danby Woods
  • Boynton Woods

For a map indicating the locations of each of the seven meeting spots, click here.

Glendon community members are asked to meet at 2pm outside Glendon Hall Manor.

For more information, visit the City of Toronto's 20-Minute Makeover website. For more earth-friendly initiatives, visit the Yorkwise Web site.


Study finds organic farms are more energy efficient

Organic farms can be more energy efficient than conventional farms that mass produce crops using unsustainable practices, a surprising result from a study co-authored by a York University professor.

Researchers analyzed 130 studies to compare the energy use and global warming potential of organic versus conventional farming. They concluded that organic farms were more energy efficient on both a per-hectare and per-product basis, with the exception of fruit farming and poultry production, where data is limited.

“These findings shake up the concept that ‘bigger’ is always better. Higher crop yields, bigger equipment, less genetic diversity, and more fertilizer and pesticides do not equal a more energy-efficient operation,” says Rod MacRae (left), a professor in York’s Faculty of Environmental Studies.

Critics of organic farming commonly argue that lower yields make it unsustainable in the long term. “As population increases and land availability decreases, it’s assumed that an ‘assembly line’ approach to agriculture is the only way to keep up with our food needs. While this is the dominant way of thinking, this logic is also deeply flawed,” MacRae says. “For example, many regions in the global south show better yield performance with organic farming. Even in North America, organic yields are not far behind conventional ones.”

MacRae points out that there is an enormous amount of waste in conventional systems. Significant amounts of edible food are lost at harvest, during processing and distribution, at retail and in consumers’ homes. “By some accounts, up to 40 per cent of what gets farmed never makes it to our mouths, and this adds enormously to energy waste. This can result in the perception that we’re not producing enough food,” he says.

Studies of conventional and organic grain growers in the prairie region showed significant benefits for organic methods, including 50 per cent lower energy use in a 12-year study of forage and grain crop rotations. The absence of nitrogen fertilizer was a main contributor to reduced energy inputs and greater efficiency. Modelling studies of a Canada-wide conversion to organic canola, wheat, soybean and corn concluded we would consume 39 per cent less energy and generate only 77 per cent of the global warming emissions and 17 per cent of ozone-depleting emissions of conventional wheat farming.

Above: Organic cultivation of mixed vegetables

In terms of dairy farming, a study in Atlantic Canada found that an organic, seasonal grazing system was 64 per cent more energy efficient and emitted 29 per cent less greenhouse gases compared with the average of conventional systems. Cows consuming an organic diet may also have a longer lifespan, increasing efficiency and reducing methane emissions when calculated over time.

Where livestock is concerned, fewer studies exist and comparisons are more difficult because of dramatic differences in operations from farm to farm, particularly for hogs and poultry. Conventionally raised beef is widely accepted as the least environmentally friendly meat, requiring seven times as many inputs for an equivalent output of calories. Organic beef production is considered to be more efficient because the animals consume more grass and less grain than humans can consume.

The study, “The Carbon and Global Warming Potential Impacts of Organic Farming: Does It Have a Significant Role in an Energy Constrained World?” was published in the journal Sustainability. Its lead author is Professor Derek Lynch, Department of Plant & Animal Sciences, Nova Scotia Agricultural College.

From the Tuesday, April 12th edition of YFile.


York releases its second annual sustainability report

The President’s Sustainability Council today released its Sustainability Report for 2010, in conjunction with Earth Hour on Saturday, March 26.

The 2010 Sustainability Report, which highlights York’s commitment to sustainability on its campuses, profiles the University’s efforts to function in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner over the past year.

"I would like to thank the Sustainability Council for all of their hard work throughout the year,” says York President & Vice-Chancellor Mamdouh Shoukri. “We are a university that is committed to enhancing our environmentally and socially responsible practices, for the benefit of all members of the York community.”

Jennifer Foster, chair of the President’s Sustainability Council, added, “The work of the council continues to provide the foundation for York’s sustainability efforts. York has already made great strides in being recognized as a Campus Sustainability Leader in the 2010 College Sustainability Report Card, and by the many initiatives on our campuses, including our Res Race to Zero.”

In the report, the council says it finds "considerable progress in York’s standing in relation to the three pillars of sustainability. York continues to lead the way in innovative yet contextually-specific approaches to building an ecologically resilient, economically robust and socially just institution."

At the same time, says the report, "the council finds that there is opportunity to continue enhancing a pan-University strategy with new recommendations that expand and deepen York’s commitment to sustainability."

To view the full report, please click here or visit www.yorku.ca/susweb.


York team wins second in TD GO Green Challenge

A sustainability project by two York students to revitalize the forest surrounding the Glendon campus has garnered second place in the fourth annual TD Go Green Challenge. The students, one from each of York University’s two campuses, combined their vision and collaborated on the project – “The Future of Our Forest: A Sustainability Vision for York University” – which included a video detailing their idea.

Right: From left, Glendon Principal Kenneth McRoberts, TD FEF regional manager Farzana Syed, Caitlin Langlois Greenham, Darnel Harris and FES Dean Barbara Rahder with the students' TD GO Green Challenge prize cheque

The second-place team of fourth-year Glendon history student Darnel Harris and masters of environmental studies student Caitlin Langlois Greenham, of the Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES) at the Keele campus, received a cheque for $15,000 presented by Farzana Syed, regional manager of TD Friends of the Environment Foundation (TD FEF), at Glendon on March 16.

Glendon College also received a $15,000 cheque, which will go towards making some of the project’s goals a reality as it is designated for planting trees in the Glendon forest.

“The judges were very impressed with how well this team articulated the challenge they presented, as well as the creativity, practicality and innovation of their suggested solutions,” said Natasha Alleyne-Martin, TD FEF manager of national programs.

Some 132 teams from 59 Canadian post-secondary schools participated in this year’s TD FEF Go Green Challenge, a national competition, which focused on sustainability and environmental stewardship on campus. The ideas ranged from paperless universities to an integrated energy and food greenhouse.

Above: The video detaling the second place TD FEF GO Green Challenge winning project by York students Darnel Harris and Caitlin Langlois Greenham

Top honours went to a team of students from McGill University, who will be awarded $20,000 and a paid 2011 summer internship with TD FEF for each student team member, while $100,000 will go to McGill University for greening the campus. Third place went to a team from the University of Victoria, who will receive a $10,000 prize and a $10,000 grant to support on-campus tree-planting initiatives.

The York team’s video outlines the challenge facing the forest around the Glendon campus, currently in a state of degradation because of overuse. It is one of the few remaining wetlands, a home to globally rare amphibians in Toronto, and an essential part of the Don Valley corridor that connects it to habitats downstream. The team proposed a four-step solution to restore the forest’s role in ecological, educational and social vitality.

Left: Farzana Syed (left), Kenneth McRoberts and Barbara Rahder hold cheque for Glendon tree-planting project

“We are all great beneficiaries of the Glendon forest, a part of our campus landscape that is close to all our hearts. We are dedicated to preserving this magnificent campus, originally built and developed by the Wood family in the 1920s, and we are delighted to receive the funds for this project,” said Glendon Principal Kenneth McRoberts.

“Environmental degradation ranks as one of the greatest challenges for our society”, said Professor Barbara Rahder, dean of York’s Faculty of Environmental Studies. “Our students remind us that a more sustainable future is possible and begins at the grassroots level, with small but innovative ideas….This is just one of our areas of strength here at York….in fact, this is the second time in just four years that York students have finished at the top of this competitive contest. TD has demonstrated a deep commitment to the advancement of York University, to the sustainability of our surrounding communities and to the conservation and protection of our collective environment. “

The two winners expressed their profound thanks to TD FEF for its generous support and emphasized the collaborative nature of the project. They also paid tribute to the team’s behind-the-scenes contributors, including Alex Lisman’s videography, Micky Rodriguez’s music composition, the crew at Regenesis@York, the President’s Sustainability Council and its student subcommittee.

Right: The Regenesis@York team with the prize

“Our team is passionate about Glendon’s forest, an ecological gem containing multiple forest biomes, an endangered wetland, and a river, in the heart of the city,” said Harris, who is also co-president of Regenesis@York, a student organization dealing with sustainability projects on both of York’s campuses. “My love for the forest led me to notice its degraded state and I began to investigate what could be done to improve the situation. Finding Caitlin, someone of like passion, and working together was indeed a blessing.”

Langlois Greenham said: “As a lifelong environmental advocate, I know the transformative value of community-based stewardship projects, and having grown up not far from Glendon, I feel closely connected to the forests here, as do so many others. This project will revitalize the forest and the entire Don River Valley habitat corridor, reconnect people with natural spaces, and raise awareness about the importance of urban nature and the value of stewarding the environment around us.”

FES Professor Jennifer Foster, chair of the President’s Sustainability Council, was the faculty advisor for the project.

For more information about the winning teams and their projects, visit TD GO Green website

Submitted by Marika Kemeny, Glendon communications officer


Emerging Green Builders – Greening Existing Buildings

When:

Wednesday, March 23 at 6:30pm.  Pizza and refreshments will be served at 6pm.

Where:

University of Toronto, John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design

230 College St. Room 103 (map)
Speakers:

Ian Sinclair, Enermodal Engineering

Leonard Allen, CEO of Solera Energies

Mitch Gascoyne, Halcrow Yolles

Buildings are the leading use of energy in North America and represent a tremendous opportunity to lower our environmental footprint.  Greening existing buildings means taking steps to improve building performance, energy efficiency and the indoor environment while saving money and decreasing our impact on the planet.

 

Come listen to a panel of experienced industry professionals who will describe the process of retrofitting existing buildings.  Our speakers will provide an overview of the process, describe the current landscape for building retrofits in Ontario and provide examples from their experience on a wide variety of projects.
Topics Include: Energy Retrofits and the Marketplace in Ontario, Conservation Incentives, Solar Power and Solar Thermal Installations, Green Operations and Maintenance and LEED EBOM.

Following the lectures there will be a social event at a pub nearby where attendees are invited to join their colleagues and our speakers for a relaxed discussion and drinks.

 

Cost:

$5 for registered EGB members, $10 for non-members (taxes included)

You can register as an Emerging Green Builder here.

 


GreenEdge 2011 Conference – Business in the Balance

What: Second annual GreenEdge conference
Where: York University’s Schulich School of Business
When: Saturday, March 12

This year’s conference, GreenEdge 2011: Business in Balance, will feature presentations and panels led by specialists in the areas of socially responsible finance, social entrepreneurship, good governance and green supply chains.

The one-day conference brings together students, alumni and professionals to share knowledge, build networks, and develop skills in the various fields related to sustainability. The speakers are leading thinkers in their field and will be sharing valuable insights with students and professionals throughout the keynote presentations and breakout sessions. GreenEdge 2011: Business in Balance is sure to inspire and educate attendees of all backgrounds, whether they are 1st year MBAs or seasoned professionals, finance analysts or die hard environmentalists!

Please see the website for more information or to register!

 


IRIS Junior Fellow enters TD Go Green Challenge

IRIS Junior Fellow Hazel Sutton, and MES student Michael Charendoff, have entered the TD Go Green Challenge. Their idea: to create an online Campus Sustainability Hub website where by dynamic electronic documentation creates instiutional sustainability memory. Visit the TD Go Green Challenge website before March 11th to vote for the People's Choice Award. Search for York, Keele or Glendon to find other entries by York students. Good luck to all!
View all the York entries and vote for your favourite idea.


Earth Hour, Every Hour

EVENT DETAILS
Date: March 16th, 2011
Time: 4.30pm – 9pm
Venue: Winters Master Dining Hall (Building #54 http://www.yorku.ca/yorkweb/maps/KeeleMap.pdf)
Dress Code: Casual
Cost: FREE

Please click here for the poster

IRIS, ECO and Net Impact will co-host an Earth Hour event focusing on this year`s theme, Earth Hour Every Hour. Sustainability should not be limited to a single day dedicated to energy reduction; rather it should about creating a future where all our needs are met by limiting how much we waste today. This year`s event will serve as a platform for discussion about how we can achieve this goal. Activities will include a fashion show with a Pre-Loved theme, a keynote speaker, dinner, followed by a performance piece.

Mr. Bowerbank from Magna International will be the keynote speaker who is a respected authority on green buildings, sustainable development, industrial design, and low-carbon economics. He regularly draws from his diverse background in efforts to engage industry leaders and support new business strategies in response to current energy and environmental issues. Mr. Bowerbank was Executive Director of the World Green Building Council between 2007 and 2009.

The fashion show will showcase re-imagined clothing made from used fabrics. The participants will include York University student talent and Pre-loved Fashion Boutique.

We hope that this event will create connections amongst the York community and bring together participants from diverse backgrounds. Join us for a night of fun and help to inspire change towards a more sustainable future!

The event will proceed as follows:

4.30-5pm Opening Address
5-6pm Fashion Show
6-6.30pm Careers In Sustainability
6.30-7pm Dinner
7-8pm Keynote Address
8-9pm Live Music Performance

All attendees will be entered in a draw to win a door prize.

To ensure there is sufficient space and food, please register your attendance by emailing us at irisinfo@yorku.ca


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