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  4. Competing priorities: lessons in engaging students to achieve energy savings in universities
 
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Competing priorities: lessons in engaging students to achieve energy savings in universities
File(s)
Bull et al 2018.pdf (245.85 KB)
Published version
Author(s)
Bull, Richard
Romanowicz, Joanna
Jennings, Neil
Laskari, Marina
Stuart, Graeme
more
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Purpose

This paper aims to present findings from an EU-funded international student-led energy saving competition (SAVES) on a scale previously unseen. There are multiple accounts of short-term projects and energy saving competitions encouraging pro-environmental behaviour change amongst students in university dormitories, but the purpose of this research is to provide evidence of consistent and sustained energy savings from student-led energy savings competitions, underpinned by practical action.
Design/methodology/approach

A mixed-methods approach (pre- and post-intervention surveys, focus groups and analysis of energy meter data) was used to determine the level of energy savings and quantifiable behaviour change delivered by students across participating university dormitories.
Findings

This research has provided further insight into the potential for savings and behaviour change in university dormitories through relatively simple actions. Whilst other interventions have shown greater savings, this project provided consistent savings over two years of 7 per cent across a large number of university dormitories in five countries through simple behaviour changes.
Research limitations/implications

An energy dashboard displaying near a real-time leaderboard was added to the engagement in the second year of the project. Whilst students were optimistic about the role that energy dashboards could play, the evidence is not here to quantify the impact of dashboards. Further research is required to understand the potential of dashboards to contribute to behavioural change savings and in constructing competitions between people and dormitories that are known to each other.
Social implications

SAVES provided engagement with students, enabling, empowering and motivating them to save energy – focusing specifically on the last stage of the “Awareness, Interest, Desire, Action” framework. Automated meter reading data was used in the majority of participating dormitories to run near real-time energy challenges through an energy dashboard that informed students how much energy they saved compared to a target, and encouraged peer-to-peer learning and international cooperation through a virtual twinning scheme.
Originality/value

Findings from energy saving competitions in universities are typically from small-scale and short-term interventions. SAVES was an energy-saving competition in university dormitories facilitated by the UK National Union of Students in five countries reaching over 50,000 students over two academic years (incorporating dormitories at 17 universities). As such it provides clear and important evidence of the real-world long-term potential efficiency savings of such interventions.
Date Issued
2018-10-16
Date Acceptance
2018-04-10
Citation
International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 2018, 19 (7)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/63586
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1108/IJSHE-09-2017-0157
ISSN
1467-6370
Publisher
Emerald
Journal / Book Title
International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education
Volume
19
Issue
7
Copyright Statement
© Richard Bull, Joanna Romanowicz, Neil Jennings, Marina Laskari, Graeme Stuart and Dave Everitt. 2018. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode
Sponsor
European Commission Directorate-General for Research and Innovation
Grant Number
Horizon 2020
Subjects
Science & Technology
Social Sciences
GREEN & SUSTAINABLE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Education & Educational Research
Science & Technology - Other Topics
Students
Feedback
Energy conservation
Competitions
Behaviour change
SAVE ENERGY
FEEDBACK
BEHAVIOR
REDUCTION
13 Education
05 Environmental Sciences
Environmental Sciences
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2018-10-16
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