Autodesk University Goes Green – Online Participation Reduces Carbon Impact of Popular Event

Autodesk recently announced the environmental impacts of Autodesk University (AU) 2010 – its popular annual user conference that attracts up to 30,000 participants each year. The results revealed that, even as the in-person attendance at the 2010 event in Las Vegas grew 16 percent from 2009, the carbon footprint was reduced by four percent over 2009. Here’s how they did it: Increased Eco-Responsibility at AU 2010 Even with overall increases in attendance Autodesk employed a series of impressive efforts to reduce the environmental impact of the event:
  • Greater promotion of online attendance – AU Virtual (LINK) eliminates the impact such large conferences as AU have on the environment, mainly in the form of greenhouse gas emissions from travel, energy, and lodging, as well as materials use and waste
  • Reduction in conference materials: Autodesk began reducing the amount of water bottles at AU in 2009. To date, Autodesk has saved 3.3 tons of plastic from landfills.  In addition, the use of online event materials that could be accessed on mobile devices eliminated the need for conference guides. Session handouts were also cut, saving 314 trees, according to Autodesk’s calculations.
  • Solid waste diversion keeps materials from landfill: More than 92 percent of all solid waste generated by the event was diverted from landfill, with food scraps going to a local pig farm and all recyclable materials being processed in Las Vegas.
  • Attendee travel continues to be largest impact: As ever with such large events, travel of attendees and employees to and from the event—Scope Three emissions—is the primary contributor to carbon impacts. These emission numbers remained flat per physical attendee at AU 2010, even as event participation grew, due in large part to an increase in online attendees.
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