Many thanks to those who responded to my query below. Below are the responses.
Best wishes
Jan

Jean-Frederic Morin:
My university (Université Laval in Québec City, Canada), claims to offset an 
average of 14,413 tons of carbon per year using its own experimental forest 
(397 km²). The forestry school designs this forest to enhance carbon 
sequestration. See details here (in 
French)https://www.ulaval.ca/sites/default/files/DD/MilieuDeVie/Action_climatique/PuitsCarboneFMM.pdf
 The remainder of the university’s emissions are offset by purchasing credits. 
Currently, we offset only scopes 1 and 2 emissions. Long and difficult 
discussions are underway to include Scope 3 emissions as well. I would love to 
know more about how scope 3 emissions are death with elsewhere, especially 
research-related flights.

Tim Forsyth:
LSE adopted offsetting in around 2022. I was partly involved. We decided to go 
for offsets that included “livelihoods” as well as cheap carbon. I can’t 
remember the names of the companies but I can find out if you want. The main 
opposition came from staff members and some students who believed that 
offsetting was immoral: period. I was arguing for the idea that “carbon” itself 
wasn't the risk; rather, there was a need to consider poverty and rights as 
well as indicators of vulnerability – i.e. carbon PLUS development.

Kathleen Mcafee:
Jan, don’t be so sure that a recommendation against the use of offsets would be 
fruitless:
https://gspp.berkeley.edu/research-and-impact/centers/cepp/projects/berkeley-carbon-trading-project/developing-ucs-offset-strategy
“Ultimately, this effort resulted in the University system's unexpected 
decision to move away from offset procurement altogether. It proved too 
difficult to identify quality projects on the market, and the process of 
developing our own offset projects also was more difficult and risky than we 
anticipated. In July 2023, the UC system replaced its 2025 carbon neutrality 
goal with accelerated targets for direct decarbonization, and a fee per ton 
emitted (the funds it would have spent on offsets) to be reinvested into direct 
decarbonization efforts.”

On 17 Mar 2025, at 13:27, 'Jan Selby' via gep-ed <[email protected]> 
wrote:


CAUTION: External Message. Use caution opening links and attachments.

Hello all,

I’m looking for examples, evidence and/or guidelines on good (and bad) practice 
that universities might follow (avoid) when doing emissions offsetting. My 
institution is currently developing an offsetting policy, and the current draft 
is far from best practice, I’m sure. I realise that one answer (and my 
instinctive answer) is that it shouldn’t be doing offsetting at all - but I 
doubt such a response would bear fruit.

So, if you have any examples or evidence, then do please share. Please just 
send to me, and I will collate for the group.

Thanks and best wishes
Jan


Jan Selby
Professor of International Politics and Climate Change
School of Politics and International Studies
University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
Tel: +44 113 343 3525

Office: 13.41 Social Sciences Building

Home page<https://essl.leeds.ac.uk/politics/staff/2557/professor-jan-selby> 
Personal website<https://wordpress.com/view/politicsecology.wordpress.com>

Latest articles:
’The many faces of environmental security’, Annual Review of Env. and Resources 
(2024, with Gabrielle Daoust, Anwesha Dutta et al) 
here<https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-environ-112922-114232>
‘There is no human climate niche’, One Earth (2024, with Mike Hulme and 
Wolfgang Cramer) 
here<https://www.cell.com/one-earth/abstract/S2590-3322(24)00313-0>
‘Climate change and migration: a review and new framework for analysis’, WIREs 
Climate Change (2024, with Gabrielle Daoust) 
here<https://wires.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/wcc.886>
Latest book: Divided Environments: An International Political Ecology of 
Climate Change, Water and Security (Cambridge, 2022; with Gabrielle Daoust and 
Clemens Hoffmann) 
here<https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/divided-environments/0621F20A4464C4E05BF76980BBF25D3F>



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