性闻联播

UMass Lowell students take the lead at Sustainability Symposium

Four students attending symposium smile at camera
Eighty-five students from 18 colleges and universities across the Northeast attended the annual Student Sustainability Leaders Symposium, hosted this year by UMass Lowell at Coburn Hall.

There were the tangible takeaways, like pollinator seed packets, jars of locally produced honey and freshly planted centerpieces on the Coburn Hall ballroom tables.

But attendees agreed that the most important thing they took away from the recent Student Sustainability Leaders Symposium, an annual half-day conference hosted for the first time by UMass Lowell, was a heightened appreciation for collaboration and partnerships.

鈥淚n the sustainability sphere, especially in higher education, we confine ourselves to our own campuses,鈥 said George Anderson, a senior environmental science major and sustainability intern at the University of New Hampshire. 鈥淭his is a great chance to find that overlap between different campuses and seek out those collaboration opportunities that are so necessary to sustainability work. I can鈥檛 wait to bring back what I learned to UNH.鈥

That was a common refrain among the 85 students who attended the symposium in person (there were also 30 remote registrants), representing 18 colleges and universities across the Northeast. 

鈥淚鈥檝e learned a lot of things that I鈥檓 excited to bring back to Harvard,鈥 said sophomore environmental engineering major Maya Pe帽a-Lobel. As one of three representatives from the Ivy League school, she was particularly interested to learn how sustainability programs are woven into all aspects of campus life at other institutions since 鈥渁 lot of the roadblocks we face at Harvard come from decentralized offices.鈥

Symposium attendees sit at tables and talk to each other during event
Symposium attendees had a chance to network and share ideas during the half-day conference.

Quinn Brophy, a freshman integrated studio arts major (and sustainability minor) at UMass Dartmouth, was fascinated to learn about programs at other schools, such as residence hall clothing swaps at Boston University and the reuse of laboratory plastics at Simmons University.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great to bring it back home to UMass Dartmouth and contribute to this change that we鈥檙e trying to make across the UMass system,鈥 Brophy said.

Seven student groups 鈥 including three from UML 鈥 gave presentations showcasing their sustainability-related research and campus projects. 

UML energy engineering Ph.D. students Visal Veng, Samuel Alpert and Benard Tabu shared their 鈥淕reen Fertilizer鈥 project, which uses solar energy, water, air and plasma to produce nitrate-rich fertilizer that is better for the environment than fertilizers currently on the market.

Senior mechanical engineering majors Alana Smith and Yicheng Zhang and Ph.D. student Oliver Martinic discussed their collaborative sustainability research with the Building Resilience through Knowledge (BUREK) Lab at UML, which is led by Mechanical Engineering Asst. Prof. .

Three students sit at a table and talk to each other during event
Students from Tufts and Harvard universities discuss sustainability work on their respective campuses.

And a trio of seniors 鈥 Sophia Governo (business), Sabrina Lehman (biology) and Madison Sachs (environmental science) 鈥 presented their green roof proposal, which was  鈥嬧媋t the Rist Institute for Sustainability & Energy Climate Mitigation Challenge ().

The symposium also featured a panel discussion on student government鈥檚 role in sustainability, moderated by senior public health major , campus life and environment chair for UML鈥檚 Student Government Association (SGA). She was joined by a trio of alumni who held the same position as students: Cody Case 鈥16, staff director for state Rep. Ken Gordon; Stephani Carnazzo 鈥19, residence life director at Endicott College; and Adam Dunbar 鈥11, senior associate director for Student Affairs.
 
Dunbar, who introduced the idea of bringing hydration stations to campus while with SGA, reminded students that 鈥測ou may never see the result of the work that you鈥檙e doing, but you鈥檙e laying the groundwork for the next generation of students that follow you.鈥

Case advised students to pick projects that they really care about 鈥 and then learn them inside and out.

Student Eco Reps from Boston University take a selfie during a break in the symposium.
Student Eco Reps from Boston University take a selfie during a break in the symposium.

鈥淏e able to answer every question that might come to you, because they will come,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n public policy, there鈥檚 limited time and resources. An easy way to hold something up is to say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 have enough information about this.鈥 So answer those questions before you get them.鈥欌 

Mechanical Engineering Assoc. Prof.  also discussed UML鈥檚 new Sustainable Water Innovations in Materials 鈥 Mentoring, Education and 性闻联播 () program. The National Science Foundation-funded initiative will train graduate students from an array of fields to develop sustainable materials and chemicals that won鈥檛 harm water resources.

While the symposium is student-run, it has been guided since 2014 by a board of curators made up of sustainability staff from around a dozen colleges and universities across the Northeast. 

Board Chair Lisa Tornatore, director of sustainability at Boston University, said she was 鈥渢hrilled鈥 for UML students to gain event-planning experience while showcasing their school鈥檚 sustainability efforts, which remain , according to the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education.

Energy engineering Ph.D. students Visal Veng, left, and Benard Tabu chat with fellow symposium attendees.
Energy engineering Ph.D. students Visal Veng, left, and Benard Tabu chat with fellow symposium attendees.

鈥淚鈥檝e been very impressed with UMass Lowell and all the sustainability work that鈥檚 going on,鈥 said Gabe DiAntonio, a first-year economics and computer science double-major at Harvard. 鈥淚鈥檓 impressed with how long-lasting the sustainability program has been.鈥

A team of student Eco Reps from the  鈥 led by junior meteorology major Victoria Wisniewski, senior public health major Martha Hernandez and mechanical engineering graduate student Charlie Connolly 鈥21 鈥 helped run the event.

In her closing remarks, senior business major , president of the Student Society for Sustainability, encouraged attendees to stay connected through the symposium鈥檚 Slack community.

鈥淐limate change isn鈥檛 a problem that can only be solved by scientists. We need business majors and politicians and leaders,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou each have a piece that鈥檚 really important to solving this problem.鈥