Tufts Environmental History
Tufts University has a long and rich environmental history. This webpage contains various formats of a timeline that provides an overview of our sustainability milestones for the last half century.
Click on the arrows to move through the presentation embedded below or scroll down to toggle open a list of what milestones happened in each decade.
The last half century of environmental work at Tufts
The beginning of Tufts’ journey.
Steps towards being a leader in environmental advocacy within higher education.
1962 Sanitary Engineering degree is first offered in the Department of Civil Engineering.
1973 The M.A. degree is first offered through the new Department of Urban, Social and Environmental Policy, founded by Professor Hermann Field.
1984 The Lincoln Filene Center begins the New England Environmental Network and launches the first of 18 annual New England Environmental Conferences.
1984 The Center for Environmental Management (CEM) is established with EPA funding and begins interdisciplinary training and outreach, eventually training more than 7000 workers and certifying inspectors in asbestos and lead-based paint abatement.
1984 The undergraduate Environmental Studies Program begins as an optional second major, open to students majoring in any field in Arts & Sciences or Engineering. Later, tracks are established in Environment & Society, Environment & Technology, and Environmental Science.
1986 CEM receives a 5-year grant from EPA and supports more than 65 faculty members to conduct research projects, in addition to training, outreach, corporate involvement, and campus greening.
1990 Tufts receives EPA funding to initiate Tufts CLEAN! (Cooperation, Learning and Environmental Awareness Now!) to reduce or eliminate harmful environmental impacts of the university’s own operations.
Tufts CLEAN! becomes a model for many other universities, with its achievements and challenges documented in Greening the Ivory Tower (1998, MIT Press) by Sarah Hammond Creighton, the former director of the Tufts Office of Sustainability.
1990 Jean Mayer, Tufts President, convenes 22 university presidents and chancellors in Talloires, France, to discuss environmental sustainability. They sign the Talloires Declaration, a 10-point action plan for incorporating sustainability and environmental literacy into campus teaching, research, operations, and outreach. The Declaration has since been signed by over 440 university presidents and chancellors from 50 countries.
1990 Tufts Environmental Policy is created.
1990s Several unique interdisciplinary degree programs are started at Tufts, including the Agriculture, Food and Environment concentration (M.S./Ph.D.) in the School of Nutrition Science and Policy; the International Environment & Resource Policy program in the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy (M.A.L.D./Ph.D.); and specializations in International Veterinary Medicine, Wildlife Medicine, and Animals and Public Policy (M.S./D.V.M.) at the School of Veterinary Medicine.
1991 Tufts Environmental Literacy Institute (TELI) receives the Presidential Environment and Conservation Challenge Award from the Council on Environmental Quality.
1992 The University Presidents’ Secretariat for Environmental Education and Research is launched to continue the efforts begun at the Talloires Conference. The Secretariat is now the Association of University Leaders for a Sustainable Future (ULSF) within the Center for Respect of Life and the Environment in Washington, DC.
1993 GDAE (Global Development and Environment Institute) is founded under the direction of Neva Goodwin and Professor William Moomaw to promote a better understanding of how societies can pursue their economic and community goals in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner.
1997 The Tufts Center for Conservation Medicine (TuftsCCM) pioneers the concept of conservation medicine as a new approach focusing on the health relationships at the interface of humans, animals and the environment.
1998 Tufts Institute of the Environment (TIE) is established under the direction of Professor William Moomaw to coordinate and catalyze environmental research, learning, outreach and service across all Schools of Tufts University.
1999 Tufts pledges to meet or beat the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, setting the goal of reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from Tufts campuses to 7% below 1990 levels by the year 2012. The Tufts Climate Initiative is created.
2000 John DiBiaggio, Tufts President, and Grace Perez, Executive Director of the Mystic River Watershed Association, join organizational forces in the Mystic Watershed Collaborative to improve water quality, habitat, public access and watershed awareness in the watershed where the main Tufts campus is located.
2001 The Energy Affairs Council is established to address energy costs, reliability, and environmental impacts.
2001 The Greening Grafton Campus Committee is established.
2001 The first Eco-Reps program for residential students begins.
2003 Tufts joins the Chicago Climate Exchange. President Lawrence Bacow adopts the goals of the New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers (10% reduction in greenhouse gases by 2020 with a 75-85% reduction long term).
2004 The interdisciplinary Water: Systems, Science and Society (WSSS) graduate program begins.
2005 The United States Environmental Protection Agency awarded the prestigious Climate Protection Award to Tufts University for the Tufts Climate Initiative (TCI).
2006 Construction finishes on Sophia Gordon Hall, Tufts’ first LEED-certified building. The hall was certified as LEED Gold, and includes a photovoltaic system (solar panels).
2006 The Tufts Climate Initiative becomes a department under Tufts Central Administration and is renamed the Tufts Office of Sustainability.
2006 Sustainability conference “Sustainability in the Balance: Juggling Environmental Health, Economic Profitability, and Social Equity in the Global Food System” held at Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition.
2007 Tufts awarded “Excellence in Energy Efficiency” Award by National Grid. Tufts’ Building 20 Energy Conservation Project on the Grafton campus, won the “Best Energy Project in Higher Education” award from the New England Association of Energy Engineers.
2008 The Eco-Ambassador program for staff starts. Tufts Environmental Literacy Institute (TELI) re-starts.
2009 Tufts named #9 on Sierra magazine’s list of Top Ten Greenest Schools.
2009 Tufts University Health Sciences Campus Green Initiative begins. Tisch Library Sustainability Team is formed. Single-stream recycling begins at the Dental School. Vegetable “box share” delivery to the Boston and Medford campuses begins.
2009 Undergraduate Student Mara Gittleman wins SustainUS undergraduate Citizen Scientist award for her research on Ethiopian Agriculture.
2009 Tufts Dental School vertical expansion is complete and earns LEED Silver certification.
2009 Tisch reference librarian Laurie Sabol chartered the Tisch Library Sustainability Team.
2009 Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine wins grant to look into wind power in Grafton.
2010 Tufts is recognized by the Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships as a Business Leader for a five year body of energy conservation projects.
2010 Weekly on-campus farmer’s market opens on Medford campus.
2010 Tufts’ Flytzani-Stephanopoulos named first Haber professor of sustainable energy.
2010 Tufts dining goes “trayless” as a result of advocacy by students in the Ex-College’s Environmental Action Class.
2011 Tufts Bikes, a student-run free bike sharing program, is launched. The undergraduate environmental group ECO reorganizes to become the Tufts Sustainability Collective to focus on sustainability action on campus.
2011 Hodgdon Goes Green and eliminates the sale of single use disposable beverages and bags, in response to student activism.
2011 Tufts earns a Silver Rating in the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System™ (STARS), developed by the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE).
2012 President Tony Monaco establishes a university-wide Sustainability Council to look at the areas of water, waste and energy.
2012 Tufts Dental School Level 2 Renovation Project earns LEED Gold Certification.
2012 Tufts receives a Green Award from the City of Medford at the 2012 Harvest Your Energy Festival in recognition of its work implementing energy efficiency, water conservation and resource use reduction efforts.
2012 Tufts is presented with the Silver Institution Recycling Award at MassRecycles’s 17th Annual Recycling Awards.
2013 The Biology Department Collaborative Center (200 Boston Ave) received LEED Gold certification.
2013 The Campus Sustainability Council releases the 2013 Campus Sustainability Council Report. The Council recommended a new goal based off of existing reduction goals and progress having met the 2010 benchmark.
The new goal calls for a 10 to 25 percent reduction of emissions below 1990 levels by 2020, in line with Massachusetts state goals outlined in the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2008.
Tufts also committed to a 3% reduction of waste each year.
2013 A Transportation Working Group was created to coordinate updates to ground transportation across Tufts' three Massachusetts campuses. Faculty, staff and students worked together to implement programs designed to comply with state and local regulations, to reduce the costs of Tufts vehicle ownership, to manage university vehicles in accordance with industry best practices, and to address the transportation needs of students and employees.
2014 A photovoltaic system (solar panels) was installed on the top of the roof of Dowling Hall on the Medford/Somerville Campus
2015 The Collaborative Learning and Innovation Center (CLIC) was completed and was accredited LEED silver.
The space reuses a century-old factory building and incorporates stunning sustainable design.
2015 A consultant was hired to compile a comprehensive Transportation Demand Strategies Report on strategies to make commuting to any of Tufts' Massachusetts easier and more sustainable. View the full report from April 2015.
2015 Tufts was re-certified with a Silver Rating in the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System™ (STARS), developed by the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). Certifications last for three years.
2015 In December 2015, the Tufts School of Medicine and Public Health joined 47 other schools in signing the President’s Health Educators Climate Commitment, in recognition of the health impacts of climate change and in dedication to educating students to address those impacts.
2016 On April 21, 2016, President Tony Monaco signed the Second Nature Climate Commitment, an integrated climate commitment for university leaders on carbon neutrality and resilience.
2016 Following the May 2016 conference on Resilient Building Codes, the Tufts University Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning endorsed the White House Educators Commitment on Resilient Design as an ACSA (Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture) member. The statement defines resilience as "the ability to prepare and plan for, absorb, recover from, and more successfully adapt to adverse events."
2016 In Fall 2016, the Food Systems & Nutrition Minor was officially launched within the Environmental Studies Program of the College of Arts & Sciences.
2017 The Science and Engineering Complex (SEC) was completed and received LEED Gold status, making it the 6th LEED certified building on campus.
2017 The student-focused Eco-Reps program expanded to the SMFA campus, with its first SMFA-based Eco-Rep in Beacon Street residence halls.
2017 In the 2017-2018 Academic Year, a group faculty, staff and students at the SMFA started the Sustainability Task Force, the first green-team on that campus.
2017 A photovoltaic system (solar panels), which had started construction in 2015, was activated on the Grafton campus in 2017, at the Cummings School of Veterinary Sciences.
2018 In May 2018, MassRIDES, a program of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, awarded Tufts University a Spotlight Award, Honorable Mention, for Excellence in Commuter Options. This award is given to companies and organizations that promote and facilitate sustainable commuting options to their employees.
2018 To adhere to the Second Nature Climate Commitment, a Community Resilience Building workshop was held for the Medford/Somerville campus in May 2018.
2018 The Green Fund had a soft launch in summer 2018, before moving to yearly application cycles in which students, staff, faculty and alumni of the university can apply for funding to implement sustainability projects for the Tufts community.
2018 The Central Energy Plant (CEP), a co-generation plant, was completed in 2018. The CEP is estimated to reduce the Medford/Somerville campus greenhouse gas emissions by 14% due to the energy efficient co-generators and boilers. The waste heat generated during the fuel burning process is harnessed to heat and cool water for use in campus buildings.
2018 Photovoltaic systems (solar panels) were installed on Hodgdon and Lewis Halls, of the Medford/Somerville Campus.
2018 The Science and Engineering Complex (SEC), which had been certified LEED Gold in 2017, had a photovoltaic system (solar panels) installed on top of its roof in 2018.
2019 Tufts was re-certified for a third time with a Silver Rating in the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System™ (STARS), developed by the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). Certifications last for three years.
2019 Greenhouse gas emissions for the entirety of Tufts University’s operations were measured at 12% below 1990 levels. This achievement fulfills two previous emissions reductions goals:
To be 10% below 1990 levels by 2020, as part of the New England Governors/Eastern Canadian Premiers Climate Change Action Plan, signed by Tufts President Laurence Bacow in 2003.
To be 10-25% low 1990 levels by 2020, as recommended by the 2013 Campus Sustainability Council, following the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2008.
2019 A photovoltaic system (solar panels) was installed on the top of the Gantcher Center on the Medford/Somerville Campus.
2020 A Community Resilience Building workshop was held for the Tufts Boston campuses (Health Sciences and SMFA) in January 2020, to adhere to the Second Nature Climate Commitment.
2020 In March 2020, the Medford/Somerville campus was certified as an affiliate of the Bee Campus USA program, making Tufts the first urban educational institution in Massachusetts to receive this certification.
2020 Also in March, Tufts transitions all classes online due to the pandemic, reducing the University's carbon emissions dramatically.
2020 The Office of Sustainability created an Equity and Justice plan. This was done in recognition of the vital importance of social and racial justice in achieving our vision of a sustainable world and the important role we play in repairing, reconciling, and decolonizing relationships with our community and environment along the way.
2020 Ecosystem Energy Services, specialists in deep energy retrofits, were engaged by the university in 2020 to refine and outline a clear pathway to decarbonize the energy system on the Medford/Somerville campus. In July 2020, Ecosystem released a Carbon Neutrality Actionable Plan with short, medium and long-term objectives.
2020 The Greenhouse is added to Tufts Community Houses for juniors and seniors. The house is well-insulated, has low-flow water plumbing fixtures, and has solar panels on the roof, among its many sustainable features.
2020 After two years of continued successes, SMFA Dean Nancy Bauer recognized the SMFA Sustainability Task Force as the standing SMFA Sustainability Committee, enabling the work of dedicated faculty, staff and students to have greater impact at the school.
2020 Tufts received a $50,000 anonymous gift to install energy meters on campus buildings as a way to collect data on energy use and inform decarbonization efforts.
2021 February 2021, the Board of Trustees approved recommendations from a Responsible Investment Advisory Group (RIAG) for increasing the University's impact investing.
2021 After over a decade of running the program, the Office of Sustainability collected 9 tons of school and dorm supplies from students during move out, diverting it from landfills and giving it new homes at the annual Tufts Back to School Sale.
2021 Tufts became a corporate partner of Bluebikes, allowing Tufts community members to receive a discounted annual membership and incentivizing sustainable transportation.
2021 In Fall 2021, the third iteration of the Sustainability Council began working on new a sustainability vision and climate action plan for the University.
2021 The Joyce Cummings Center opened as the most sustainable building on campus at the time. The structure featured two heat recovery wheels, a heat recovery chiller, a rooftop solar array, triple glazing on windows for temperature control, efficient lighting and occupancy sensors, and more. This building marked a huge step in decarbonizing the Medford/Somerville campus.
2022 The Science and Engineering Complex wins two prestigious sustainable architecture awards.
2022 Tufts recognized as a leader in sustainability at the Casella Sustainability Leadership Award Ceremony. The award highlighted our campus-wide sustainability initiatives including specialty recycling for film, foam, and textiles; move-out donation days; and the Tufts Eco-Rep Program in which over a dozen students support sustainability in the residence halls.
2022 In April 2022, U.S. Senator Ed Markey, White House National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy, and leading environmental experts came to Tufts for a special multi-event Massachusetts Climate Summit, called "Confronting the Climate Crisis: Global Solutions, Local Action", hosted by the Tisch College of Civic Life.
2022 A reusable takeout container program, called "Green to Go", debuts at Elm's Cafe on the Grafton campus.
2022 Dano Weisbord joins Tufts in October 2022 as the new Chief Sustainability Officer and Executive Director of Sustainability.
2023 Grafton launches nitrile glove recycling to implement a recycling stream for single-use medical gloves at Tufts.
2023 Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) students at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine in Grafton, MA reinstall beehive boxes on campus.
2023 Tufts University introduces Resilient Climate Leaders programming including three new co-curricular programs: Sustainable Solutions Fellows, Sustainable Core Fellows, and Sustainable Spring.
2023 The Office of Sustainability moves to a new building, Bromfield Pearson, with the Environmental Studies Program, Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning, and Department of Earth and Climate Sciences.
2023 Tufts University is a Host Institution for the 2023 AASHE Conference, a global gathering of higher education professionals held in Boston on October 29th - 31st.
2023 The Equity and Justice Working Group (EJWG), within the Sustainable CORE Fellows program, were recognized as finalists for the 2023 Student Sustainability Leadership Award from the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education. Led by Sustainable CORE Fellow coordinator, ShaSha Kingston, the group emerged from the restructured Eco-Reps program, centering on environmental justice and equity.
2023 Joyce Cummings Center received the Excellence in Construction Eagle Award from the Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) who presented the awards to PROCON, the firm responsible for the construction. The project received further recognition for efficient design from the Design-Build Institute of America.
2023 Tufts University expands its Medford/Somerville campus by adding two energy-efficient houses under the Community Housing (CoHo) initiative for juniors and seniors with a focus on greatly reducing energy consumption and shrinking the buildings’ carbon footprints.
2023 Tufts University contracts Salas O'Brien to update its decarbonization plan to consider new policy and funding opportunities included in the Inflation Reduction Act.