SDG 13 Climate Action

Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts

sdg13 climate action
sdg13 penguin climate change

Environmental Research Institute

We are home of the Environmental Research Institute, a team of highly skilled researchers focused on mitigating the impacts of climate change.

sdg15 soil carbon content leaf

Carbon Footprint

Conscious decision-making about our carbon footprint in all campus operations and capital projects.

sdg17 partnerships

Engagement

Our multi-disciplinary team of researchers exploring how we can be more effective at engaging with our diverse communities so people are more likely to take action on climate change.

Energy from renewable resources

We aspire reach 100% renewable energy use on campus. In 2023, of the 78GJ of energy we used, an increase in the proportion from renewable sources to 65%.

 

 

2021 2022 2023
Total energy used (GJ) 75.9 78.1 77.5
Total energy from low-carbon sources (GJ) 43.8 49.0 50.5
Proportion 58% 63% 65%

 

Lessons from Cyclone Gabrielle

Shortly after Cyclone Gabrielle devastated the East Coast region of the North Island of New Zealand in 2023, the Manatū Hauora/Ministry of Health commissioned a group of researchers including the University of Waikato's Holly Thorpe to investigate the impacts of adverse weather events on health systems and community health and wellbeing.

The community research teams interviewed 143 residents in the two affected regions. They included first responders, heath workers, council staff and members of the public.

A report published by the Ministry of Health in 2024 contained five key recommendations made by the group to help plans for future events.

New water-sampling device a game-changer for climate change scientists

sdg13 cave water sampling video

Waikato researchers unlocking keys to climate change hidden in the drip water from inside New Zealand’s deepest caves, have developed a new device which is now being used by researchers around the world. The device, called Syp, is now being manufactured in Hamilton and marketed by Waikato Scientific Instruments. Syp can automatically collect up to 58 predefined water samples over 12 months, all powered by AA batteries. Without Syp, researchers would have to make multiple trips to remote caves that can take hours or even days to reach on foot, making it challenging, time consuming and costly.

World-first Bachelor of Climate Change launched

The University of Waikato achieved a world-first in 2021, with the launch of a new Bachelor of Climate Change degree. The new, three-year cross-disciplinary undergraduate degree welcomed its first students in A Trimester 2022. This degree combines scientific knowledge of the biophysical world with understanding of economic and political systems and the impacts on Māori, Pacific and Indigenous communities. Dean of Science, Professor Margaret Barbour, says students with the new qualification will be in demand as we work towards the target of net-zero emissions by 2050.

The Bachelor of Climate Change brings together this collective expertise across all the disciplines creating a common language in the fight against the globe’s most pressing environmental issue.