Manipal University has a well-thought out, multi-pronged approach towards reducing its environmental footprint. This includes a comprehensive waste management policy and a programme to reduce energy consumption. It has rainwater harvesting systems equipped with the very latest in filters, three sewage treatment plants and it also uses its rainwater runoff. In addition to ISO-14001:2004 certification, the campus has received several awards for environment management.
All very admirable but not nearly enough. Here's why.
Everything that the University does to recharge and reuse water accounts for a mere 10% of its total consumption. The campus harvested a little over 24 thousand cubic metres of rainwater in 2012 but its students alone consumed an estimated 14.5 lakh cubic metres or sixty times what was conserved!
Water consumption in the hostels alone is 200 litres per person per day. This is exclusive of laundry, air conditioning, and cooking. For comparison, the Bureau of Indian Standards considers 135 lpcd perfectly adequate for an individual's entire daily needs. Clearly, there is a disconnect between the students' water usage and the University's stated goals for reducing this usage.
Manipal University hosts about 20,000 of the country's bright young minds. Students, with their intelligence, ambition, and perseverance, have extraordinary potential to effect positive change. It is very likely that the young people from this campus will go on to occupy influential positions in careers of their choice. Hospitals, factories and construction sites are large consumers of water. If the next generation of corporate leaders are water-aware and environmentally committed, it could well change the face of these industries. That is a large premise, however. The students first have to learn lessons in conservation if they are to make a change.
Is that a university's job, though? Does its responsibility stop at teaching its students the core subjects they signed up to study or should it take students' education a step further and build their characters and sensitivities? That's a difficult question to answer but here are some suggestions on how to involve students and expose them to more than they signed up for.
These efforts aren't easy. Students can be blasé, focused on their books, and can possess more inertia than Newton would believe possible! But us 'grown-ups' are not too different. So the last point on my list is: