"The Green Team," Duke Magazine, May-June 2003
Advocates for the Environment
In spring 2003, Justin Segall
and Anthony Vitarelli, then sophomores, spoke with
Duke Magazine about the early successes of their environmental
advocacy group, the Duke University Greening Initiative
(DUGI).
Starting with a plan to promote green building, the
two had quickly enlisted the support of the administration,
donors, graduate students, and an advisory board featuring
the former dean and two members of the board of visitors
of the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth
Sciences.
Their youthful enthusiasm was inspiring, but the article
noted that "student ownership is probably also
DUGI's greatest vulnerability. In two years, when its
organizers graduate, the greening initiative will experience
a 100 percent turnover in leadership."
Those two years are up--Segall and Vitarelli both graduated
in May--but the environmental movement on campus has
not stopped, well, moving. That's thanks in large part
to another recent graduate, Sam Hummel '03, who in
April 2004 was hired as the university's first environmental
sustainability coordinator. Hummel has quickly embraced
the changes promoted by DUGI, and inspired others of
his own.
Besides continuing the push for LEED-certified buildings--a
new center at the Duke Marine Lab will likely achieve
a gold certification--Hummel successfully lobbied for
the hiring of green dining and procurement coordinators
and helped win administrative support for a green purchasing
policy that has already increased campus use of recycled
office products from 11 to 25 percent.
In March, administrators signed an environmental policy
calling for Duke to become a leader in environmental
research and practices. A committee that includes representatives
from facilities management, transportation, and DUGI
inventoried Duke's greenhouse gas emissions and came
up with a top-ten list of policy alternatives--including
buying longer buses and retrofitting buildings--that
would actually save money while reducing CO2 emissions
by 7 percent.
Segall and Vitarelli made fun of the sort of wide-eyed
environmentalism that inspires a lot of eye-rolling--"We
have to show them that we know what we're talking about," Vitarelli
said, "that we're not just some idealistic kids," and
that reliance on realism and hard facts continues to
permeate Duke's efforts. Hummel responded to calls
for solar panels in the Bryan Center roof by assigning
an intern to study the possibility. "It would
have cost $1.6 million, and powered only 15 percent
of the BC's energy needs. What else could we do with
that $1.6 million?"
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