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St. Mary’s
College Tops Green Power Challenge
No. 1
in EPA’s CAC Purchase of Green Power Energy
Press Release
#11-093
(St. Mary’s City, MD) April 18, 2011 — The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency announced today
that St. Mary’s College of Maryland is the
Individual Conference Champion of the Capital
Athletic Conference in the 2010-2011 College and
University Green Power Challenge. This is the
college’s fourth consecutive year as the largest
green power purchaser in its conference.
“I’m proud of the
commitment our community has made to protecting
natural resources,” said the college’s
sustainability coordinator, Luke Mowbray. “Our
participation in the renewable credits market
has been a very exciting addition to our campus
sustainability initiatives.”
St. Mary’s College
purchased 22 million kilowatt-hours (kWh) of
renewable energy credits from the company
3Degrees, representing 116 percent of the
school’s annual electricity usage and more than
half of the campus’ carbon footprint. According
to the EPA, 22 million kWh of renewable energy
is equivalent to avoiding the annual carbon
dioxide (CO2) emissions of either 3,000
passenger vehicles or from the electricity use
of nearly 2,000 average American homes. The
college also generates green power from a solar
photovoltaic array atop the college library.
The Green Power
Partnership is a voluntary program that
encourages organizations to buy green power as a
way to reduce the environmental impacts
associated with purchased electricity use. Green
power is electricity that is generated from
renewable resources such as wind, solar,
geothermal, biogas, biomass, and low-impact
hydro. The Partnership currently has more than
1,300 Partner organizations voluntarily
purchasing billions of kilowatt-hours of green
power annually.
Since April 2006,
the EPA’s Green Power Partnership has tracked
and recognized the collegiate athletic
conferences with the highest combined green
power purchases in the nation. Thirty-one
collegiate conferences and 69 schools competed
in the 2010-2011 challenge. ”We’re glad to see
the competition heating up as more and more
colleges and universities join the Green Power
Challenge,” said EPA administrator Lisa P.
Jackson. “This year’s schools used more than 1.5
billion kilowatt hours of green power, cutting
harmful emissions from our air, protecting
health and driving demand in the clean energy
market.”
The EPA will
extend the College & University Green Power
Challenge for a sixth year, to conclude in
spring of 2012. EPA’s Green Power Challenge is
open to all U.S. colleges, universities, and
conferences. For more information, visit:
http://www.epa.gov/greenpower/initiatives/cu_challenge.htm.
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