2003 Internships

Green Laboratories

Sponsor

Environmental Protection Agency, ECO

Intern Manager

Jessica Woolliams, Coordinator, Longwood Green Campus Initiative (HGCI)

Intern

Matt Lloyd is native to New England, having grown up in Beverly, MA. He completed his undergraduate degree in Environmental Sciences at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Matt will continue his work with the Harvard Green Campus Initiative and the EPA through this semester. "I was excited to do this because I was interested in progressive Industrial Hygiene, and the Labs 21 project has served as an intersection of health/safety matters and energy efficiency/pollution prevention." In the future, Matt intends to continue his work combining his interests in worker health &safety and environmental sustainability.

General Purpose

The overall goal of this project is to bring together the best thinking (current research and best practices) and the right people (academics, staff and industry representatives) to begin to map out a path to more environmentally and socially sustainable lab guidelines.

Intern will bring together relevant academic research that may be useful to directing best practice and a future course of action which would influence, constructively, the revisions to and uniformity of laboratory design and operations to benefit safety, efficiency and environmental performance.

Background

Laboratories, in the words of Don Prowler, attract the greatest intellectual and economic resources of our society. Within the university context, laboratories also represent the most energy and water consumptive building typology. While a very wide range of resource intensive technologies are installed in a wide variety of laboratories, the collective impact of all campus laboratory fume hoods place them at the top of the list for energy intensive technologies within campus laboratories. In essence, the laboratory fume hood represents the most energy consumptive devise operating within the most energy consumptive building typology within the most energy intensive universities in the world.

The fume hood is designed to satisfy a convergence of human health, environmental, research and financial needs. A cohesive set of fume hood and associated laboratory ventilation standards, as well as a methodology for ongoing performance testing is essential for the university sector to be able to optimize the financial, environmental and human health performance of laboratories. Yet presently, the codes and standards for laboratory ventilation and fume hoods are contradictory and often not based on a scientific understanding of operational safety.

Overview of Tasks

S/he will meet with a Steering Group of core representatives of faculty and staff from Harvard and other Universities to assess the below research and will draw the active participation of the laboratory industry into a forum for the purpose of addressing this research. Such a forum should shape a center of collective intelligence for this research.

Research will include:

  • Compiling and clarifying the governing ventilation and fume hood standards and codes for a diverse range of laboratory facilities in universities. Outline in which cases these codes are based on operational safety and in which cases research needs to be done to understand the relationship between the codes or standards and operational safety.
  • Identifying the opinions and attitudes of laboratory professionals utilizing existing codes / standards, and their opinions and knowledge about the safety, financial and environmental implications of different codes and standards. Developing an assessment of actual ventilation and fume hood performance requirements leading to a new set of performance recommendations for the university sector.
  • Identifying a methodology for testing ventilation and fume hood performance over the life of the laboratory.
  • Compiling a variety of laboratory design best practices to inform future university lab design, renovation and maintenance.

Deliverables

Report submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency, the Harvard Green Campus Initiative and the internâ€Ts Steering Group. This report summarizes the interns work, the input of the steering committee, and recommends a course of action for research, policy and ongoing information-sharing.

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