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Campuses Divert 105 Million Single-Use Plastics from Landfill During 2024 Campus Race to Zero Waste Competition; May 14, 2024; National Wildlife Federation

Campuses Divert 105 Million Single-Use Plastics from Landfill During 2024 Campus Race to Zero Waste Competition

By: Alex Domb

National Wildife Federation

2.7 million students, faculty and staff across more than 150 college campuses donated, composted and recycled more than 30 million pounds of waste.

RESTON, Va. , a program of the National Wildlife Federation and RecycleMania Inc., has recognized 30 colleges and universities as winners in this years competition. Winners are selected in each major category representing small, medium and large campus sizes, with individual winners announced for special categories. 

This years college and university competition participants made enormous strides on waste reduction and integrating sustainable practices throughout their campuses, said Kristy Jones, director of higher education programs at National Wildlife Federation. These collective actions to reduce the schools waste footprints are inspiring and are making a tangible positive impact on the environment. 

Our 2024 winners show why colleges continue to be among our nations leaders on sustainability, said Stacey Wheeler, co-founder and president of Campus Race to Zero Waste. These schools run the gamut urban and rural, public and private, large and small. Their success shows that waste reduction in any type of community is possible, and is a testament to every student, faculty and staff member who made these accomplishments happen.

More than 2.7 million college students and staff across more than 150 campuses competed to reduce their waste footprint through minimization efforts by donating, composting and recycling more than 30.7 million pounds of waste. As a result, they kept more than 105 million single-use plastic containers out of landfills and prevented the release of 23,174 metric tons equivalent of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, equal to avoiding the annual emissions from 5,515 cars. 

Winners from each category include: 

Zero Waste Category
    Large campus: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
   **No small or medium campuses named in this category for the 2024 competition. 

Food Organics Category
    Small campus: Aquinas College, Michigan
    Medium campus: Loyola Marymount University, California
    Large campus: 做厙輦⑹, Ohio

Diversion Category
    Small campus: Macalester College, Minnesota 
    Medium campus: Seattle University, Washington
    Large campus: University of Louisville, Kentucky

Per Capita Category
    Small campus: Neumann University, Pennsylvania
    Medium campus: Loyola Marymount University, California
    Large campus: Boston College, Massachusetts

GameDay Basketball
    Diversion category: University of Richmond, Virginia
    Per Capita Recycling category: University of the Incarnate Word, Texas

Race to Zero Waste One Building challenge
    Pennsylvania State University

Clean-up Category
    Drexel University, Pennsylvania

Electronics challenge
    Per Capita Recycling category: Northwest Missouri State University
    Total Pounds Recycled category: Rutgers University, New Jersey

Green Events
    Agnes Scott College, Georgia and University of Massachusetts Amherst (under 50 attendees)
    University of Michigan Dearborn and Villanova University, Pennsylvania (under 100 attendees)
    Southern Illinois University Carbondale and University of South Carolina Upstate (under 500 attendees)
    Iowa State University (under 1,000 attendees)
    Coastal Carolina University, South Carolina and University of California, Irvine (more than 1,000 attendees)

For more details about our categories and winners, please visit the .

About Campus Race to Zero Waste

Campus Race to Zero Waste is the nations premier waste reduction and recycling competition among colleges and universities, managed by the National Wildlife Federation, and governed by RecycleMania, Inc. Campus Race to Zero Waste has been helping campuses minimize waste and improve their recycling efforts since its launch in 2001. 

POSTED: Tuesday, May 14, 2024 07:30 AM
Updated: Monday, June 24, 2024 07:31 AM