
Stanford is the Top-Scoring Institution for Sustainability Under AASHE STARS 3.0
The university earns STARS Platinum in version 3.0, the highest score under the sustainability rating system.
In 1997, Stanford University and Peninsula Sanitary Service, Inc. (PSSI) invested in an automated sorting machine to separate recyclables to get cleaner material that was more valuable for manufacturers. This enhanced equipment used magnets, jets of air, and other mechanisms to strategically sort out materials by commodity type. Other types of recyclables were sorted by hand by PSSI employees as the material moved along the conveyor belt.
This sorting line processed over 9 million pounds of recyclables. In 2020, the line was decommissioned. Rather than sending it to metal recycling and landfill, Stanford donated the line to a company in McFarland, California where it has been repurposed to help turn food byproducts into animal feed.
Finding a new purpose for this machinery is an example of being a wasteless community. It also helped the wider California community reduce costs and emissions through reuse.

The university earns STARS Platinum in version 3.0, the highest score under the sustainability rating system.

Stanford’s Travel/Study programs are leading a quiet revolution in climate-conscious cuisine.

Stanford Travel/Study, an educational travel program for alumni and friends of the university, is tackling plastic waste trip by trip.