Overall Rating Gold
Overall Score 66.74
Liaison Jennifer Bodine
Submission Date July 22, 2024

STARS v2.2

Weber State University
OP-2: Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 5.30 / 8.00 Jennifer Bodine
Sustainability Specialist
Facilities Management
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions

Gross GHG emissions

Gross Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions:
Performance year Baseline year
Gross Scope 1 GHG emissions from stationary combustion 5,400.95 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 9,619.64 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Gross Scope 1 GHG emissions from other sources 1,597.49 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 738.67 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Gross Scope 2 GHG emissions from imported electricity 6,935.73 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 14,994.65 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Gross Scope 2 GHG emissions from imported thermal energy 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Total 13,934.17 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 25,352.96 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent

Carbon sinks

Figures needed to determine net carbon sinks:
Performance year Baseline year
Third-party verified carbon offsets purchased 689 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Institution-catalyzed carbon offsets generated 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Carbon storage from on-site composting 7.96 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Carbon storage from non-additional sequestration 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent ---
Carbon sold or transferred 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Net carbon sinks 696.96 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent

If total performance year carbon sinks are greater than zero, provide:

A brief description of the carbon sinks, including vendor, project source, verification program and contract timeframes (as applicable):

WSU composts food and green waste. Green waste is composted at the Wasatch Integrated Waste Management Facility and food waste is composted at the Wasatch Resource Recovery center in North Salt Lake.


WSU also annually purchases carbon offsets with donations from faculty, staff, and students who seek to offset their commuting carbon footprint. In FY 23, WSU purchased 689 MTCO2e from the Dempsey Wind Project which utilizes the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS). Further information about this program and project can be found here: https://www.weber.edu/sustainability/footprint.html 


 


Adjusted net GHG emissions

Adjusted net Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions:
Performance year Baseline year
Adjusted net GHG emissions 13,237.21 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 25,352.96 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent

Performance and baseline periods

Start and end dates of the performance year and baseline year (or three-year periods):
Performance year Baseline year
Start date July 1, 2022 July 1, 2006
End date June 30, 2023 June 30, 2007

A brief description of when and why the GHG emissions baseline was adopted:

FY 2007 is the year that WSU became an ACUPCC signatory and made the commitment to become a carbon neutral campus. This is the year we have used as our baseline for all of our ACUPCC reports and all internal reporting.


Part 1. Reduction in GHG emissions per person

Weighted campus users

Figures needed to determine “Weighted Campus Users”:
Performance year Baseline year
Number of students resident on-site 850 475
Number of employees resident on-site 3 0
Number of other individuals resident on-site 0 0
Total full-time equivalent student enrollment 18,868 14,791
Full-time equivalent of employees 1,980 1,653
Full-time equivalent of students enrolled exclusively in distance education 4,112 813
Weighted Campus Users 12,765.25 11,842

Metrics used in scoring for Part 1

Adjusted net Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions per weighted campus user:
Performance year Baseline year
Adjusted net Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions per weighted campus user 1.04 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent 2.14 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent

Percentage reduction in adjusted net Scope 1 and Scope 2 GHG emissions per weighted campus user from baseline:
51.56

Part 2. GHG emissions per unit of floor area

Performance year floor area

Gross floor area of building space, performance year:
3,201,258 Gross square feet

Floor area of energy intensive building space, performance year:
Floor area
Laboratory space 108,336 Square feet
Healthcare space 3,599 Square feet
Other energy intensive space 38,068 Square feet

EUI-adjusted floor area, performance year:
3,463,196 Gross square feet

Metric used in scoring for Part 2

Adjusted net Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions per unit of EUI-adjusted floor area, performance year:
0.00 MtCO2e per square foot

A brief description of the institution’s GHG emissions reduction initiatives:

In 2007, Weber State University formalized its dedication to climate action by signing the American
College & University Presidents’ Climate Commitment whereby we agreed to eliminate our
emissions and become carbon neutral by the year 2050. Upon signing this commitment, WSU
immediately got to work completing its first greenhouse gas emissions inventory and adopting its
first Climate Action Plan completed in 2009.


WSU’s first projects were largely focused on improving energy efficiency. In 2009, WSU completed
an investment grade audit of its facilities and was one of the first public universities in the U.S. to
establish a green revolving loan fund to finance the implementation of the energy and water saving
projects identified in the audit. The realized utility savings from the implemented projects are used
to pay off the debt and then funds are borrowed again to complete a fresh round of projects.


WSU was also one of the first universities in the Country to create a strategic plan to transition all of its buildings over to all-electric heat-pump based variable refrigerant flow (VRF) mechanical systems. Transitioning WSU’s buildings, vehicles, and equipment over to all-electric versions is allowing the University to reduce (and eventually eliminate) the consumption of fossil fuels and source our energy from renewable sources. 


Since 2007, WSU has made significant progress. WSU has transitioned over 30% of its square footage over to highly efficient all-electric VRF mechanical systems with a plan to rennovate the very last building and shut off the last natural gas fueled boiler starting in 2038. WSU has also converted over 12% of its fleet to plug-in hybrid or all-electric vehicles. 


WSU has also installed three large groundsource well fields and over 2.5 MW of solar on its campuses with plans to install another 3-4 more groundsource fields, several more MW of solar, and a substation battery back-up system. 


Given this progress, WSU updated its Climate Action Plan in 2020 and changed the University's carbon neutrality goal from 2050 to 2040 as we realized we were a decade ahead of schedule and could make that commitment. Please see WSU's latest Climate Action Plan (updated in 2020) which provides progress and strategy details.  


https://www.weber.edu/sustainability/reports.html?_gl=1*pskzx7*_gcl_au*NTE5OTA4NjUxLjE3MTMwMzM0ODM.*_ga*OTkyNzcwMTMzLjE2OTUwNTM5NjI.*_ga_NBZY81HSZM*MTcxODA1Mzg5My42MDYuMS4xNzE4MDU1Njc3LjAuMC4w 


 


 


 


 


Website URL where information about the institution's GHG emissions is available:
Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.