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Sources: Ben Champion, 785-313-3085, champion@k-state.edu;
and Sharon Brookshire, 785-532-2566, sharonb@k-state.edu
Web site: http://sustainability.k-state.edu/conferences/leadingkansas/
News release prepared by: Andy Badeker, 785-532-6415, media@k-state.edu
Thursday, Oct. 9, 2008
K-STATE CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABILITY TO COLLECT IDEAS, BUILD INTEREST
MANHATTAN -- An effort to make Kansas State University not just a participant but also a leader in the drive toward sustainable practices has created an on-campus conference scheduled for Jan. 23, 2009.
Organizers of the Leading Kansas in Sustainability conference are evaluating proposals from government, education, commercial and nonprofit entities for presentations and poster sessions at the inaugural conference. Final selections should be made by the end of October.
Ben Champion, K-State's director of sustainability, hopes the event will help build a community of interest about sustainability at K-State.
"That means catalyzing interest across departments, colleges, curriculum, research -- all across campus," he said. "We really want to showcase what K-State is doing, and to prove to ourselves that we have the capacity to be a force for change. The other purpose is to send a message to the state and to stakeholders across Kansas that we want to be a leader in this area."
Spreading the latest tactics and research on green issues is a logical outgrowth of K-State's traditional mission as a land-grant institution, Champion said.
Though the conference has the structure of a traditional academic conference – papers and presentations by experts on a predetermined range of topics -- Champion wants the gathering to attract students and people from all walks of life across Kansas to find out where K-State can help.
The range of conference issues is intentionally broad because virtually all aspects of human activity affect the environment, and vice versa, Champion said.
Topics will range from the concerns of academic research and university operations to rural population loss, soil and water conservation, and potential economic models of green development across the state.
"Our society has a lot to confront in coming to terms with sustainability and we need to think carefully and seriously about what that means for K-State and the state as a whole," Champion said.
Conference sessions consist of the following tracks:
* Energy: Presentations will identify the long-term prospects and changes needed in supply, efficiency and demand appropriate to sustain quality of life in Kansas. Speakers will represent consumers and producers of energy.
* Rural sustainability: Prospects for continued decline, stabilization or reversal of population loss are central to the sustainability of the state. Community scale, the role of technology, governance and infrastructure all determine what is sustainable on the Kansas prairie.
* Water and soil: This track will focus on natural resources in Kansas, their quality and distribution.
* Economic development and the emerging green economy: The challenges of developing such an economic base include reforms of existing industries as well as development of new economic models and organizations. Topics in this session could focus on investments by renewable energy companies, the role of small grocery cooperatives, and tensions between sustainable agriculture and resource-intensive conventional methods.
More information is available at the conference Web site:
http://sustainability.k-state.edu/conferences/leadingkansas/