Sustainability has been an integral part of our university’s development for a long time now. With the new mission statement, “Working Together for Sustainability,” the University is setting itself specific sustainability goals and committing itself to sustainable development on campus, to which all its members can contribute. The aim is to gradually reduce environmental pollution and the consumption of resources in the interests of climate neutrality, help to answer urgent questions facing society through top-class research and teaching, and establish a culture of sustainability.
BOOST—committed to sustainability
The University is pressing ahead with developing a comprehensive sustainability strategy and embedding sustainability systematically in everything it does to ensure a present and future worth living in. The Bonn Program for Sustainable Transformation (BOOST) brings all of the University of Bonn’s sustainability work under one roof. Says Prof. Dr. Annette Scheersoi, Vice Rector for Sustainability: “For us, BOOST is more than just a slogan. This program stands for sustainable behavior at the University of Bonn, for our responsibility and for our commitment to doing our bit for a society that’s fit for the future.” Various key players are joining forces to foster a culture of sustainability: the student-run “Green Office“, student initiatives such as the “Fairtrade University” group and numerous sustainability working groups and dedicated individuals in central and decentralized areas of the University. The Vice Rectorate and the Sustainability Unit are pooling the efforts of everybody involved and coordinating the transformation process. Prof. Scheersoi adds: “It’s wonderful to see how many initiatives are coming together, continuing to evolve and being brought to life.
BOOST is a byword for all of this and an invitation to all students and staff to drive sustainability forward together.” In its mission statement, the University sets out its sustainability goals and undertakes to formulate measures for achieving them. According to Prof. Scheersoi, however, real change can only happen if everyone pulls together: “We’ve got a massive amount of potential at the University and can have a direct impact on society through our engagement as an agent of change. Driving forward this transformation and helping it on its way is an exciting task.”
All the University’s sustainability activities—across research, teaching and operations—come under the BOOST umbrella. All University members are warmly invited to get involved, e.g. via contributions to regular campaign months, making suggestions on integrating sustainability into our day-to-day lives or getting involved in projects to make the campus sustainable.
The fact that all university employees participate in the development process is also represented by the Sustainability Day. “I am convinced that many new ideas will originate from here and that we will be able to gradually make our University more sustainable, adopting the mantra “Nachhaltigkeit (er)leben” (“experiencing and embracing sustainability”),” Professor Scheersoi looks ahead.