Austin College has reached its goal of using 100 percent renewable electricity this summer. Courtesy of Austin College.

Aug. 23, 2015

From AustinCollege.edu

Austin College, a private liberal arts college in Sherman, is celebrating the achievement of a milestone in environmental progress: 100 percent renewable electricity. Since 2010, the College has steadily increased its purchase of wind-powered electricity. That annual increase, coupled with a renewable component in its provider contract, allowed the College to reach its goal of 100 percent renewable electricity this summer. This shift has substantially reduced the College’s environmental impact. In fact, the College has almost cut in half its greenhouse gas emissions since 2010.

The switch to renewable electricity is only one way Austin College is lightening its environmental impact. Students run AC Unplugged, a residence hall energy conservation competition each fall, and GreenServe, a day of service dedicated to the environment each spring, through an organization called Austin College Thinking Green. Students also manage the Student Sustainability Fund and propose greening policies and procedures to the administration. The College has adopted more than two dozen student proposals so far, from recycling and rainwater collection to modular carpeting and efficient lighting. In addition, the College’s recently opened IDEA Center is the first LEED Gold-certified facility in Grayson County.

The switch from nonrenewable, dirty electricity to renewable, clean electricity has not broken the bank. In fact, the added price of renewable electricity is far less than simultaneous savings from electricity conservation.

“Whereas pundits claim that a shift from nonrenewable to renewable electricity is unaffordable, the purchase of wind-powered electricity costs the College less than a nickel per student per day,” said Dr. Peter Schulze, director of the Center for Environmental Studies. “What is more, simultaneous energy conservation efforts have saved several times as much money as the extra expense for wind power. Just like at home, simple steps like turning off lights in empty rooms save more than the extra cost of buying clean energy.”

Schulze is quick to add that the higher cost of renewable electricity is only an illusion anyway. Nonrenewable sources of electricity, such as coal and natural gas, would be more expensive if their generators were not allowed to pollute the atmosphere for free.

“As is often noted, price is what the consumer pays; cost is what society pays. Wind’s price is slightly higher, but its cost is much lower.”

It would not be efficient for the College to operate its own turbines, so how can the College claim to use wind-powered electricity when the turbines are far away? Neither the campus buildings nor any other buildings connected to the common grid can control the source of the electricity that lights their lights and runs their refrigerators. But if no one can control their source of electricity, how can entrepreneurs make a profit selling green, clean electricity?

The need for society to wean itself from nonrenewable fuel, combined with the efficiency of a common grid for distributing power, necessitates an accounting mechanism for attributing the use of the clean energy fed to the grid. Clean energy consumption is tracked—accounted for—with “renewable energy credits.” In essence, generators of renewable electricity are allowed to sell two products: electricity and renewable energy credits. The holders of the credits, or RECs, are considered responsible for the use of the clean energy. Someone who has contracted for renewable electricity for their home or apartment is actually buying the electricity and renewable energy credits, but the distinction is not normally made in the consumer market. Austin College can claim to use wind-powered electricity because the College purchases both electricity and RECs, thereby contributing to the transition to a renewable, clean energy supply, Schulze said.

The shift to renewable electricity and other strides of Austin College Thinking Green earned Austin College a place in the Princeton Review’s annual guide to green schools. Only 5 percent of the nation’s colleges and universities make that cut.


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