The Purple Line / Jan. 21, 2009 at 11:22 pm

Green Cup kicks off its fourth year

May the smelliest dorm win!

Tuesday marked the beginning of the fourth annual Green Cup, a competition between residence halls to save energy and water. From Jan. 20 to March 3, Green Cup will measure Northwestern students’ efforts to be environmentally conscious, whether by taking shorter showers or doing fewer loads of laundry.

The brainchild of SEED, Green Cup is headed by Weinberg junior Laura Christian and Communication sophomore Elisa Redish, with the support of Engineers for a Sustainable World, Environmental Campus Outreach, Facilities Management, Student Affairs, Center for Student Involvement, University Housing and the Residence Hall Association.

For the second year in a row, the Green Cup will last six weeks, in contrast to its original inception as a two-week challenge.

“With a two-week-long competition, students did not really have to make lifestyle changes to save energy and water,” Redish wrote in an e-mail. “Instead, they could just not do their laundry for two weeks and voila, energy and water reductions. In a six-week-long competition, students have to make actual, conscious changes in how they go about their daily business in order to conserve energy and water.”

To measure residences’ water and energy conservation, Facilities Management will compare a baseline reading of all the dorms to a final reading at the end of Green Cup.

Dorms are divided into two categories: those with dining halls and those without. The dorm in each category that has the highest per capita water and energy consumption reductions will win environmentally-friendly giveaways and a party including live music and food, according to Redish.

As an additional incentive, the leading dorms in each category after three weeks will win 25 to 30 $5 Starbucks gift cards, which will be distributed by CAs.

This year, Christian and Redish wanted the competition to be about more than just conserving water and energy. The two co-chairs saw Green Cup as an opportunity for students to learn about environmentally friendly lifestyles.

In an effort to raise students’ awareness about green living, Green Cup will host speakers and firesides which students can attend to gain points for their dorm. These points will count for 25 percent of the overall score.

Christian and Redish also set up many other activities for the competition including events like an ARTica event, a DM “Green” Trivia Night and an event at Whole Foods Market.

“We set up these events so that Green Cup would be more interactive and to sustain interest in and motivation for participating in Green Cup,” Redish said.

But Weinberg junior Daniel Burgener said he doubted many students would change their habits because of Green Cup.

“I feel like there’s a lot of apathy, and a lot of students don’t take it seriously,” he said. “But it if helps some students live more environmentally friendly lives, it’s a good thing.”

Green Cup is the real deal for the Green House, according to its president, Jacqueline Beard.

“We had a brainstorming session with residents to talk about things we can do to reduce our water and energy usage,” the Weinberg sophomore said, mentioning competitions over who could take the shortest showers and studying in common rooms to save electricity.

According to Beard, the Green Cup’s effect will go beyond the six weeks of the contest.

“You can’t regulate industries as individuals, but in terms of being aware of the impact of each of our individual lives has on the earth, on its resources, on the ability of the earth to sustain us […] Individual choices are the things that make us really value the earth’s ability to do that,” Beard said. “And Green Cup helps people be aware of their impact.”

Chloe Benoist contributed to this report due to a conflict of interest between the author and Jacqueline Beard.

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Comments

  1. To be honest, I did not even read this piece. Such is my opinion on the drivel on NBN, which, I presume, can only stand for Nauseating Banal Nonsense.

    Sirs or madams responsible for this abomination, do your part and resign. Immediately. This site is to journalism what my many lovers are to me – a source of occasional, but utterly meaningless amusement, meant to be discarded on the nearest available street corner as soon as the deed is complete. There is no love, no depth, no raison d’etre — just an endless masquerade of different faces and shapes, each meant to pleasure me but each leaving me with the bitter taste of bile in my mouth because I know that no matter how hard they may try, each is more flimsy and fleeting than the last. None can provide me with true meaning. That is what this article is to me.

    So by not reading it, I make a conscious choice. Think of it as if I pulled a paper bag over your head before the deed. I acknowledge, yes, my desires – I indulge occasionally in banal campus “journalism.” But I refuse to acknowledge how ugly and bitter and utterly endlessly hopeless you are to me. It is better not to confront that truth. It is better simply to not read at all, to not look the evil in the eye. Ignorance is peace.

    DO YOUR PART AND RESIGN. And visit my Web blog. Right now.

    NU NEEDS A VICTOR

    January 22, 2009 at 11:31 pm

  2. to the person who already commented: you’re freaking crazy.
    about green cup: personally i think it’s stupid. sure, people might make “actual, conscious changes in how they go about their daily business in order to conserve energy and water,” but they’re only doing it because of green cup (and the benefits of winning). i mean, after these 6 weeks are over, do you think people are really going to torture themselves by turning off the water to the shower when shampooing, turning down the heat to the point they need a jacket in their room, etc? green cup is not sustainable and really won’t have much of a long term effect.

    anonymous

    January 23, 2009 at 3:09 am

  3. the point of making Green Cup so long is to put people in an energy-conscious mode and to establish sustainable habits. The hope is that people will carry on these practices long after the competition is over (and they often do).

    And to the person who made the first comment: what’s wrong with you?

    haha

    January 23, 2009 at 10:26 am

  4. NU Needs a Victor? I think Victor needs a less overused Wordpress template.

    Dima

    January 23, 2009 at 3:42 pm

  5. i understand that many students may just be doing these behaviors to win green cup, but the idea is that they start to become aware of their individual impacts on the world and our natural resources. also, the reductions in energy and water use (even if temporary) are real and translate into water and energy saved in reality.

    also, green cup helps educate people who usually dont have time to learn about or are usually apathetic to environmental issues.

    woot

    January 23, 2009 at 4:25 pm

  6. Willard is pretty smelly, so I think we’re going to win again.

    Willardite

    January 25, 2009 at 7:16 pm

  7. Victor…you win! You are the most pretenious. I suppose you are also completely apathetic on campus…you have way too much time on your hands.

    Charlie

    January 25, 2009 at 8:20 pm

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