Mount Allison hosts second annual 'Lights Out Mount A'
Last updated at 12:32 PM on 18/03/10 http://www.sackvilletribunepost.com/index.cfm?sid=333076&sc=129
Mount Allison hosts second annual 'Lights Out Mount
A'
The Sackville Tribune Post
Students and staff at Mount Allison University will take part
in their second 'Lights Out Mount A' event this Friday.
The entire campus will be turning off lights and talking about climate
change throughout the day.
Mount Allison student Keleigh Annau founded Lights Out Canada, the
overall project.
"Mount Allison creates an environment that both fosters academic
enrichment and empowers students to get involved. To have so many
passionate students spreading the word, doing presentations in schools,
and helping to coordinate Lights Out Mount A, is truly heartening and
incredibly valuable to the project," says Annau.
Last year, Mount A made history by being the first university ever to
participate campus-wide in Lights Out Canada. Mount Allison students,
staff, and faculty had the biggest team on the EcoAction teams website,
where participants go to sign up and take individual surveys.
Collectively, the university committed to saving 4,949,884 litres of
water, 20,517 kg of waste, 192,347 kg of greenhouse gas, $20,858.23 in
energy costs, and 305,611 kWh of energy.
"Mount Allison has a long history of coming together to create positive
change. We are proud to be the first university in Canada to join this
effort and look forward to building on the success of last year's
efforts by partnering again with Keleigh and Lights Out Canada," says
Ron Byrne, Mount A's vice-president of international and student
affairs.
Lights Out Canada
Keleigh Annau's environmental initiative began when she was just 16,
with a pilot project involving high schools. During the event, schools
turn off their lights and follow lesson plans provided by Annau and her
team. The lesson plans, suitable for Grades K-12, have been reviewed and
are endorsed by both teachers and environmental leaders including Nobel
Peace Prize recipient Dr. Andrew Weaver and David Noble, founder and
principal of the 2DegreesC. The Lights Out Canada lesson plans focus on
global warming and what individuals can do to effect positive change.
More than 100,000 students in 10 countries took part in the program this
past year. This year, in the fifth annual nation-wide event, an
unprecedented 140-plus schools registered within three weeks, with
numbers continuing to rise. The organization's goal is 350 schools - a
number that represents the safe volume in parts per million (ppm) of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Schools across the country will be
turning their lights out on April 22, 2010 - Earth Day.