State of the sector report

Posted in: Comment, News and Updates

As catchy titles go, you have to say that this is down there with "M4 closed by accident" which my local newspapers seem to feature every week.

The report in question, is on sustainability in UK tertiary education, and it was released last week. The report may be gloomy, but it's the result of a worthy collaboration between Environmental Association for Universities and Colleges (EAUC), National Union of Students (NUS), University and College Union (UCU), Association of Colleges (AoC), and the College Development Network (CDN).

The report is based on survey responses from 548 staff involved in sustainability in universities and colleges.  The survey set out to identify how further and higher education institutions are responding to environmental sustainability and social responsibility challenges, as well as how staff perceive their institution’s efforts.  Inevitably, the intention is to rerun the survey annually, producing reports that track perceptions and trends.

Its key findings are:

  1. 25% of respondents report that sustainability is a strategic priority.
  2. University staff indicate doubts regarding the likelihood of achieving carbon reduction targets at their institutions, with 40% saying they are unlikely or very unlikely to meet targets.
  3. Action on teaching and learning for sustainability is varied, with 25% of Higher Education sustainability staff indicating that they do not have any plans, projects or campaigns in this area at their institution.
  4. Just 16% of overall respondents rate performance on ethical investments as ‘very good’ or ‘good’.
  5. A lack of financial and staff resources are seen as the biggest barriers to acting for sustainability with support from the highest levels seen as the most important way of overcoming these barriers.
  6. There are concerns over reductions in budget for sustainability, with 33% of college sustainability staff respondents and 20% of university sustainability staff respondents expecting a decrease in budget.

I said it was gloomy.  If you've got the stomach for it, you can download the report here.

Posted in: Comment, News and Updates

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