How can you be off by 43 years to meet a goal? Either the goal was a fraud, or this was an effort to pretend you cared about the goal. In this case, the real problem is that UCLA can not raise tuition high enough or fast enough to pay for the non productive carbon goals of the drugged out policy makers. Drugs can be the only excuse for the disaster to this policy.
““Based on UCLA’s current carbon emission trends, The Stack projects that UCLA will reach zero net carbon emissions in 2068, 43 years after its 2025 goal,” the data blog for the student newspaper reported.
“Although UCLA is offsetting its carbon emissions, the university’s total carbon emissions continue to increase by an average of 1.7% each year since 2007,” the paper reported.
Universities can offset their carbon emissions by buying credits from organizations that are taking steps to reduce carbon.
“Becoming carbon neutral means that the total amount of carbon emissions from an organization is balanced with the number of carbon offsets that the organization funds, and thus net carbon emissions are zero,” the paper explained. “Some types of carbon offsetting include reforestation, renewable energy projects and landfill management.”
In a world where the air does not know campus, State or national boundaries the ide you can “buy” carbon credits is a joke. All that means is that you are moving your bad air to other parts of the State or world. This is what happens when you get a degree from a college that does not believe in science.
UCLA will miss carbon neutral goal by 43 years: report
GRACE SHOEMAKER, The College Fix, 8/3/22
The University of California Los Angeles will miss its goal to be carbon neutral by 43 years, according to an analysis conducted by the student newspaper.
However, UCLA disputed the Daily Bruin’s claim.
“The university is on track to meet its climate neutrality goals. For more information, please see our climate action plans,” media director Bill Kisliuk told The College Fix. He did not respond to a follow-up email that asked for specific flaws in the campus newspaper analysis.
None of the three authors of the article responded to College Fix emails about the disagreement with the university and if officials had discussed problems with their analysis with them.
Former University of California system president Janet Napolitano set a goal in 2013 for all UC campuses to be carbon-neutral by 2025, but the paper projected UCLA will not reach its goal until 2068.
The Carbon Neutrality Initiative announcement in 2013 stated:
The University of California is a national leader in sustainability and effective actions to reduce greenhouse gases to mitigate climate change. The University galvanized its position for environmental stewardship in 2007 when all ten Chancellors became signatories to the American College & Universities Presidents’ Climate Commitment. To reach our next goal, which is to bring the University to carbon‐neutrality in its operations by 2025, we will need to take bold efforts to change the fundamental profile of our energy sources.
All the other UC campuses, with the exception of Merced, are also projected to miss their targets.
That report found that the campus’ carbon emissions were rising an average of 4,750 metric tons each year.
“Based on UCLA’s current carbon emission trends, The Stack projects that UCLA will reach zero net carbon emissions in 2068, 43 years after its 2025 goal,” the data blog for the student newspaper reported.
“Although UCLA is offsetting its carbon emissions, the university’s total carbon emissions continue to increase by an average of 1.7% each year since 2007,” the paper reported.
Universities can offset their carbon emissions by buying credits from organizations that are taking steps to reduce carbon.
“Becoming carbon neutral means that the total amount of carbon emissions from an organization is balanced with the number of carbon offsets that the organization funds, and thus net carbon emissions are zero,” the paper explained. “Some types of carbon offsetting include reforestation, renewable energy projects and landfill management.”
Sustainability at UCLA did not respond to requests for comment on projected failure to achieve its carbon neutrality goals and what mistakes were potentially made in its analysis.
“As the University works to accomplish that goal, we will continue to challenge ourselves by harnessing the best available science and technology to achieve greater carbon reductions,” Nurit Katz, the chief sustainability officer for UCLA, stated in an email to the Daily Bruin.