- CNRS - Université de Rennes, Geosciences Rennes, Rennes, France (laure.guerit@univ-rennes1.fr)
Since March 2021, Geosciences Rennes, France has a Sustainable Development and Social Responsibility working group whose main missions are (i) to quantify the laboratory's carbon emissions using the GES1point5 tool, (ii) to propose awareness-raising and training initiatives, and (iii) to set up a transition plan. Some of our activities are managed by the Observatoire des Sciences de l'Environnement de Rennes (OSERen), to which the laboratory belongs: purchases made by analytical platforms, management of some scientific projects, analytical and scientific equipments. It is necessary to integrate these “delocalized” flows in order to track the evolution of the laboratory's emissions over time, without any bias due to changes in administrative management. In 2023, these flows represented 54% of Geosciences Rennes' purchases. Carbon budgets were done for 5 years (2019-2023), an environmental charter adopted in 2022 and a transition plan voted in 2023, to be applied from 2024 onwards. This multi-year plan (2024-2030) is incentive-based and non-binding.
Despite our efforts to raise awareness (communication, conferences) and the adoption of an environmental charter, only emissions linked to buildings (electricity and heat consumption) and commuting have decreased, from 289 T ecCO2 in 2019 to 195 T eqCO2 in 2023 (-30%). We suggest that this is a response to the policies put in place by the university and the Rennes metropolitan area to encourage energy savings, soft mobility and work from home.
After a sharp drop in 2020, mission-related emissions in 2023 were close to their pre-covid level. To better understand the origin of these emissions, we worked at the individual level. Every year: the majority (>80%) of agents emit less than 1T eqCO2/year for their missions, all modes and reasons combined and in 2023, 72% of missions were made by train or car, with an average distance of 500 km. As data acquisition in the field is the laboratory's core business, it seems possible to maintain a high level of research activity with study areas located close to the laboratory. Purchasing-related emissions have never decreased and even rose from around 420T eqCo2 (average 2019-2022) to 800 T eqCO2 in 2023. As a result, the share of purchasing in the laboratory's total carbon footprint has risen from 47% in 2019 to 68% in 2023.
Awareness-raising initiatives thus appear as a necessary but not sufficient step towards reducing our laboratory's carbon footprint. Such measures help creating a positive intellectual environment, prone to changes in favor of less-environmental impacting research. The detailed analysis carried at individual level for missions has enabled us to highlight the heterogeneity of the footprint linked to professional travels, and to propose actions that are targeted, more equitable and acceptable. Access to individualized data for purchases would enable us to propose similar targeted actions for an effective mitigation strategy. The plan voted for in 2023 will most likely require a revision of its application modalities in the years to come, in order to keep pace with the expected reduction trajectory.
How to cite: Guerit, L., Jardé, E., Jeanneau, L., Battais, A., Coche, A., Dietrich, P., Fournereau, M., Gourmil, G., and Moreau, F.: Can awareness-raising alone reduce the environmental footprint of a geosciences laboratory? , EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr–2 May 2025, EGU25-8470, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-8470, 2025.