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No-one left behind: Massey signs Aotearoa sustainability declaration

Thursday 23 September 2021

In a bid to further Massey's commitment to the United Nation's Sustainability Development Goals (SDG), the university has signed the Aotearoa Sustainability Declaration, alongside 160 other organisations.

No-one left behind: Massey signs Aotearoa sustainability declaration - image1

Massey has signed the Aotearoa Sustainability Declaration.

Last updated: Tuesday 16 December 2025

In a bid to further Massey鈥檚 commitment to the United Nation鈥檚 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), the university has signed the Aotearoa Sustainability Declaration, alongside 160 other organisations.

The declaration was signed at the recent Aotearoa SDG Summit, which brought together more than 440 people across different sectors who want to make meaningful change towards the United Nation鈥檚 17 Sustainable Development Goals. The summit and workshops were held online this year due to COVID-19, similarly to the Green campus virtual day held earlier this week.

The workshop sessions explored the diverse challenges aligned to the goals, including creating youth-inclusive organisations, embedding Te Tiriti-based principles into climate meetings for New Zealand, and the realities of life for people on a Pacific atoll acclimatising to higher ground.

The declaration commits signatories to abide by fundamentals including Te Tiriti o Waitangi underpinning their actions, collaboration, urgent transformation of economic and social systems to ensure no one is left behind.

Massey鈥檚 Director of Sustainability Dr Allanah Ryan says is the university is particularly focused on goal 13: Climate Action.

鈥淢assey鈥檚 commitment to the goals can be seen through our Masters of SDGs 鈥 a unique qualification in Australasia that is interdisciplinary as well as fostering collaboration between different sectors in society.

鈥淲e are working to connect our operations involving energy use, waste, and management of the farms to our strengths as an educational and research institution. Many students undertake projects in their course work that look for solutions to some of Massey鈥檚 sustainability challenges.鈥

She says one example is the work that students undertook as part of their course 鈥 178.719 鈥楥limate change, economics and policy鈥 鈥 where they identified opportunities to reduce emissions from energy, in particular lighting.

The university is committed to be Net Zero Carbon(NZC) by 2030. Being NZC refers to achieving net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by balancing those emissions generated with an equivalent number of emissions sequestered (for example through trees) or offset through the purchase of third-party carbon credits.

Last year the university also launched the initiative Walking the Sustainability Talk which plans to establish an organisation-wide network of staff and students actively engaged in transforming the way we utilise resources, provide services and embody kaitiakitanga.

You can view the sessions and project showcases .