University of Arizona

The University of Arizona has been committed to sustainability since our beginning in 1885. There was no LEED certification then but our first building, Old Main, which is 120 years old and still in use today, was constructed with local materials and designed for climate control using common-sense principles. In 2015, we are proud to continue this tradition as a signatory of the American College and University President’s Climate Commitment. The University received a gold star rating from the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education for our comprehensive approach and our vision as a living learning laboratory for sustainability.

The UA’s Institute of the Environment, which includes more than 300 faculty members, fosters and facilitates collaborations across the state and around the world to help explain and resolve environmental challenges. Established in 2010, the UA’s Office of Sustainability works to ensure that the UA continues to be a leader in sustainability among its peers, collaborating with partners across the University of Arizona and throughout the community to coordinate environmental sustainability initiatives and communication.

Students passionate about sustainability spearhead organizations such as Compost Cats. A program of Students for Sustainability (SfS), Compost Cats works to reduce waste and greenhouse gas emissions and increase local food security by diverting food scraps, landscape clipping, zoo waste, and paper from landfills and turning it into a high quality soil amendment for local agriculture and landscaping use. SfS also runs recycling at UA sports events, the UA Community Garden, tabling at Tucson’s Earth Day festivities, and other sustainability initiatives.

Approved by the Board of Regents in 2010, the UA Green Fund allocates up to $400,000 each year to support sustainability-related projects proposed by any member of the UA community, and encourages collaborations between students, faculty, and staff. Notably, grants are also awarded by a committee of ten graduate and undergraduate students, which means the decisions behind this student-funded program are made by students.

How do you move the Planet Forward? Tweet us @planet_forward or contribute to the conversation with your own story.

The Latest From University of Arizona

A man holds a picture of his family up to the camera while standing in a horse enclosure with horses framing him on each side.

Stephen Yellowtail is a generational Crow cowboy who has held onto the Yellowtail ranching legacy on the Crow Reservation. (JoRee LaFrance)

Indigenous Correspondents Program | University of Arizona
Planet Forward Sr. Correspondent | University of Arizona
A black and white image of a coyote caught on a trail camera at night.

In Navajo stories, the coyote is a trickster and a teacher that disobeys normal rules and conventional behaviors. (Nadira Mitchell)

Indigenous Correspondents Program | University of Arizona
A page of sheet music for a song titled, "The Sound of Mountains Melting," lies on a flat surface framed by a collection of small objects including a flute.

Handwritten sheet music inspired by Earth’s Wild Music by Kathleen Dean Moore, Ph.D. (Chris Zatarain)

Planet Forward Correspondent | University of Arizona

Pages