Penn wins EPA’s Green Power Challenge for fourth year

The University of Pennsylvania won the EPA’s College and University Green Power Challenge for the fourth straight year. (Photo: The University of Pennsylvania)

The University of Pennsylvania won the EPA’s College and University Green Power Challenge for the fourth straight year. (Photo: The University of Pennsylvania)

From Green Right Now Reports

The University of Pennsylvania was the top individual school in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s 2009-2010 College and University Green Power Challenge. The EPA said that Penn, which has won the event for the last four years, beat 53 other universities by purchasing more than 192 million kilowatt hours of green power, or 46 percent of its power purchases.

The Ivy League finished as the overall college conference champion in the challenge, with an annual green power usage of more than 225 million kWh — the equivalent environmental impact of avoiding the annual carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions of nearly 31,000 vehicles. After the Ivy League, the Big Ten Conference followed by the University Athletic Association are in the No. 2 and No. 3 spots, respectively.

Green power electricity generates less pollution than conventional power and produces no net increase in greenhouse gas emissions. The EPA ranks collegiate athletic conferences by the total amount of green power used by their member schools. To be eligible, each school in the conference has to qualify as an EPA Green Power Partner and each conference has to collectively use at least 10 million kWh of green power.

The EPA said 54 universities from 26 athletic conferences competed in this year’s challenge. The challenge’s total annual green power usage of more than 1 billion kWh has the equivalent environmental impact of avoiding the CO2 emissions of nearly 160,000 vehicles.

EPA’s Green Power Partnership encourages organizations to use green power as a way to reduce the environmental impacts associated with traditional fossil fuel-based electricity use. Green power is generated from renewable resources such as solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, biogas, and low-impact hydropower.

The partnership includes a diverse set of organizations including Fortune 500 companies, small and medium businesses, government institutions, as well as a growing number of colleges and universities.