Young leader to attend national sustainability conference colin rose

Page 1

Local sustainability leader chosen to attend national conference St. John’s, NL. April 23, 2014 – Young people across Canada are at the forefront of the sustainability movement, acting as catalysts for lasting change. One local student, Colin Rose, of Memorial University, has been selected to join other young leaders at a national all-expenses-paid conference this spring. Rose is among 175 college and university students chosen from more than 730 applicants across Canada to participate in IMPACT! The Co-operators Youth Program for Sustainability Leadership. The Program involves a conference, workshops, mentoring and funding for student projects. “I am very excited to have been selected to attend the IMPACT Sustainability Leadership Conference. Sustainability – whether it’s in an environmental, social, or economic context – is a very important consideration for me as an engineering student. Engineers are morally obliged to ensure sustainable design. However, sustainability is not just limited to engineering. The great thing about IMPACT is that it involves students from a range of educational backgrounds all coming together with their own experiences in sustainability. I look forward to collaborating and sharing ideas with all of the attendees at the conference in May.” Rose adds that students are divided into focus groups ahead of the conference and assigned specific challenges. “As part of the Sustainable Business Model challenge group, I will be participating in a gap analysis of the production systems of large Canadian manufacturers. The goal for this challenge is to consider these existing systems and suggest modifications that will minimize environmental degradation or, better yet, be ecologically restorative.” Renowned Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield will be the keynote speaker at the program’s key event, the IMPACT! Youth Conference for Sustainability Leadership. He will share his unique perspective on our planet and the special role young people can play. Rose will join his colleagues at the University of Guelph campus from May 23 to 26, 2014 where they will team up with experts to develop real sustainability solutions to take back to their campuses, communities, and current or future workplaces. The participants are students, aged 19 to 25, from 68 Canadian colleges and universities. They come from a variety of fields of study but share a passion for bringing about positive change. The multi-disciplinary approach is intended to spark creativity and create broad-based networks. “When The Co-operators launched the IMPACT! Program in 2009, sustainability was an issue that we felt deserved attention, but was not necessarily at the forefront of the minds of most Canadians,” said Kathy Bardswick, President and CEO of The Co-operators. “Since then, awareness of the need for sustainable practices, products and systems has grown, and it is young people who are often the leaders, taking action to create a more sustainable society.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.