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Sustainability

At pilipiliÂþ»­, sustainability is woven into everything we do: operations, academics, and research.

Sustainability core concepts

Indigenous knowledge concepts of respect for the environment, reciprocity, and responsibility, such as the Mi’kmaq concept of Netukulimk, have been embedded globally in human cultures for thousands of years.Ìý

A diagram of three concentric circles. The innermost reads, "society health", then "economy", and finally, "environment" on the outermost circle.

Concepts include:
Ìý
  • appreciation of and respect for the natural world
  • short-term and long-term planning approaches Ìý
  • integration of environmental, social, human, and economic goals in policies and activitiesÌý
  • community engagement
  • intergenerational, global, regional, and local equity
  • responsible governance

The integration of these concepts differs depending on the sustainability definition used. The common concentric circle definition used in this plan recognizes the earth and a healthy ecosystem as the outer ring and the foundation of existence, followed by the economy: what we do to serve and create, and societal and health outcomes for people and other species.

$100M invested in sustainability projects by Dalhousie and partners in the past decade
600+ students have graduated from the Environment, Sustainability, and Society program since its founding in 2009
90% of our academic departments offer courses on sustainability topics
44% of our research community is engaged in sustainability research
GOLD Our STARS rating, the leading global system for measuring sustainability in every aspect of higher education
38% reduction in GHG emissions since our baseline year, 2010, as of 2022/23