2013 Head of Estates and Sustainable Development Andrew Smith.

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Transcript of 2013 Head of Estates and Sustainable Development Andrew Smith.

2013

Head of Estates and Sustainable DevelopmentAndrew Smith

What I’m going to cover

• HEFCE• How we see sustainability• A new Sustainable Development

Framework• Where you come in!

• Non-departmental public body (NDPB): formed in 1992 under the Further and Higher Education Act

• Devolved administrations have their own arrangements

• Independent body to implement government policy and advise government on HE

• c200 staff based in Bristol and London

HEFCE: the background

What HEFCE does

A. Investment

B. Regulation

C. Information

D. Partnership

Higher Education Success

• With 1 per cent of the world’s population, UK HE produces 9 per cent of the world’s scientific papers and 13 per cent of the most highly cited

• 87 per cent of UK HE research activity reviewed by the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) was of international quality

• 2009 National Student Survey shows that 81 per cent of respondents were satisfied with their course

• UK remains the favoured destination for international students (after the US)

Higher education’s contribution

• Role as educators

• Research and knowledge transfer

• Leadership in society

• Business operations

A rich history in higher education

• 1958 – Institute for Development Policy and Management established at the University of Manchester

• 1967 – First School of Environmental Sciences

• 1972 – Climatic Research Unit, the first institute set up to specifically study climate change

• 2000 – Tyndall Centre established with HQ at UEA

What HEFCE can do

Role as catalyst and facilitator

• Engaging with partners

• Good practice and capacity building

• Rewarding more sustainable practice

• Information and analysis

Funding projects• Developing leaders for sustainable development:

enabling behaviour change – Bournemouth University

• Midnight Oil – University of Oxford

• Leading curriculum change for sustainability: strategic approaches to quality enhancement – University of Gloucestershire

• Sustainability Exchange – Staffordshire University and the Environmental Association for Universities and Colleges

• Recoverable grants for carbon reduction projects

• Proven technologies and innovative projects

RGF 1

• £30 million; 59 institutions funded

• Estimated annual savings of 8.6% by 2020

RGF2

• £11 million; 27 institutions funded

• Annual savings of 18,500 tonnes

RGF3?

Revolving Green Fund

Revolving Green Fund 3

Providing : c£20m in Recoverable Grants

To achieve : Cost savings and carbon reduction

Through : Small scale programmes and retrofit projects

Received : 40 Small scale programmes £12.6m

17 Retrofit projects £15.3m

Announcements in May 2013

Web publication of a summary report

Many drivers for SD

Lower costs

Students

Staff

Employers

Funding

GovernmentSociety

Public relations Marketing

Moral

Media

Legislation

Energy SecurityRisk Management

• Sector strategy agreed through consultation

• Published with UUK and GuildHE

• Sets out areas where we will work with institutions and others to achieve reductions

• Requirement for institutions to set their own targets and develop carbon management plans

• Linking capital to carbon performance

Carbon reduction strategy

• Challenging targets for sector and society

• 34% by 2020 and 80% by 2050 against a

1990 baseline (scope 1 and 2 emissions)

• ‘Leading sustainable development in

higher education’

• Revolving Green Fund

• HEFCE capital linked to carbon

Carbon Reduction

Institutional targets 2005 - 2020

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Sustainable Development HEFCE’s roleA new SD Framework for how we

engage with the sector

– Discussion

– HEFCE’s LGM Strategic

Committee (May)

– HEFCE Board (July)

– Consultation

Questions to consider

• What should HEFCE’s role be?• Is our assessment right?• Is there anything we should be doing that

we aren’t doing; anything we should stop or do differently?

• How can we support and encourage others?

Thank you for [email protected]

How to find out moree-mail [email protected]

Twitter http://twitter.com/hefceweb-site www.hefce.ac.uk

admin-hefce e-mail distribution listHEFCE update, our monthly e-newsletter

Questions to consider today

• What are the most significant challenges you face within your HEI?

• What are the biggest opportunities?• What would you like to see in the new

HEFCE framework?• What are the strengths and weaknesses of

HEFCE’s approach?  

‘Aha’ Moment

• It’s not the technical ‘what’ that you should focus on -  get people to buy into the ‘why’