About climate and sustainability at King’s
Enabling societal transition to environmental sustainability is a...
King's Sustainability team welcomes ideas from undergraduate or postgraduate students who would like to work on any aspect of sustainability as part of a research project.
There are a number of questions we are working on that may be an interesting research project.
We can offer an initial discussion around the challenge we have, and can provide data where it is available or suggestions where to obtain it, then students would be expected to plan and deliver their project with support from their supervisor.
Interested students can email sustainability@kcl.ac.uk with any initial ideas, which could be from the list below or something completely different.
Students from any discipline can help us understand how we can better integrate issues of Fairtrade, trade justice or ethical consumption into university operations.
This could involve working with our Procurement team to assess, rank and improve impact through the supply chain on issues such as clothing and uniforms, food, IT and electronics, construction supplies, working with social enterprises.
Other possible dissertation questions could include the following or any other topics:
We are committed to ensure all students, regardless of course or discipline, receive a sustainable education during their time at King's. There are many different approaches to embedding sustainability into Higher Education and difficult to know which routes will have the biggest impact.
Research into sustainable education involves:
You would be investigating how we can effectively encourage behaviour change in King's students and staff delivering research to understand:
Sustainability behaviour change topics could include reducing single-use plastics, reducing energy use, encouraging sustainable consumption, switching to active travel, reducing waste, and many others.
King's has ambitious targets to reduce carbon emissions, and make a positive contribution to climate action. There are opportunities to investigate how organisations like King's can take climate action, what makes it meaningful or impactful and actions that can have the biggest impact.
Our King's Climate Action Network covers a wide range of climate issues: construction, energy consumption, biodiversity, procurement, waste, travel, education, student engagement, community engagement, responsible investment, and research. We welcome proposals exploring any of these areas, as well as overarching themes such as climate justice and climate governance.
King's is committed to following the waste hierarchy of Reduce, Reuse, Recycle while embedding circular economy principles into our decisions. There are opportunities to investigate how this, or other elements of King's Waste and Resource Strategy and Action Plan, can be implemented. Potential topics include:
Help understand and quantify how much single-use plastic we use across King's to gather a baseline, and start to define what is essential single-use, and what could be substituted or replaced. Topics to explore include where single-use disposable items are used, how much and why they are used, how they are disposed of, re-usable alternatives and how willing people are to substitute single-use plastics.
With many organisations and governments pledging net-zero targets or carbon neutrality, offsetting is becoming more common. It is a highly debated issue, with concerns around 'greenwashing', effectiveness at removing carbon from the atmosphere, and ethical concerns around land use. Potential projects could investigate how, and if, organisations should use offsetting in meeting their climate targets.
There are several opportunities to investigate how public sector organisations, large companies and universities like King's can improve supply chain sustainability. This could take the form of investigating a particular supply chain (e.g. food, IT, services) for key sustainability issues and good practice, and analysing how this can be improved at large organisations through policies and procedures or measures such as categorisation in procurement catalogues.
Increasing numbers of workers are adopting hybrid working patterns, including many staff at King's. This means they split time between working in the office and working from home. Hybrid working can have a range of positive and negative impacts on sustainability, and projects could investigate the impact of hybrid working on diverse issues:
How can biodiversity be improved and championed in an urban area such as central London? This could investigate King's campuses or other urban areas, and consider how space for biodiversity can be created, how existing habitats can be improved or protected, the benefits biodiversity can have on the city and people, and how biodiversity can be embedded into construction projects.
How can we encourage more people to drink tap water and use water refill points, and not be put off by taste or perception? What myths would we need to dispel? What differences are there between different groups?
Enabling societal transition to environmental sustainability is a...
Embedding sustainability into education and the student experience
Mobilising King’s research and expertise to respond to the climate crisis