Campus News

UB poised for Kamala Harris’ visit

Vice President Kamala Harris.

During her visit to UB today, Vice President Kamala Harris will speak on the Inflation Reduction Act and tour the GRoW Clean Energy Center on the North Campus.

By CORY NEALON

Published September 14, 2022

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“We are deeply honored to host Vice President Kamala Harris at the University at Buffalo and have the opportunity to showcase the impactful ways that we are harnessing UB’s tripartite mission of research, education and engagement to mitigate the detrimental effects of climate change by developing innovative solutions for a sustainable world. ”
President Satish K. Tripathi

When Vice President Kamala Harris visits UB today to provide remarks about the Inflation Reduction Act, she’ll do so at a university and in a region poised to capitalize on the landmark legislation. A major thrust of the new bill is its commitment to addressing global warming.

During her visit to UB, Harris will participate in a clean energy and sustainability tour at the GRoW Clean Energy Center on the North Campus. The tour will be followed by remarks by the vice president at an Inflation Reduction Act Climate Event in UB’s Center for the Arts at 2 p.m.

The university community is invited to view the vice president’s remarks via livestream at www.buffalo.edu/vp-kamala-harris.  The remarks also will be streamed to the video screen in One World Café on the North Campus.

For years UB, a flagship of SUNY, has made strategic investments by hiring world-class scholars, building state-of-the-art facilities and creating interdisciplinary research programs that have uniquely positioned the university as a national leader for developing solutions to the many facets of climate change.

“We are deeply honored to host Vice President Kamala Harris at the University at Buffalo and have the opportunity to showcase the impactful ways that we are harnessing UB’s tripartite mission of research, education and engagement to mitigate the detrimental effects of climate change by developing innovative solutions for a sustainable world,” said President Satish K. Tripathi. The full statement is available on this webpage.

Today, Tripathi will provide welcoming remarks before Harris’ address. Additionally, Harris will be introduced by Srikrithi “Sri” Krishnan (first name pronounced “Shree”), a Williamsville resident who this May received bachelor’s degrees in public health and psychology from UB, and is now a UB graduate student enrolled in the MBA/MPH (master’s of public health) program.

UB efforts to address climate change include establishing in 2014 the UB RENEW Institute, which includes some of the world’s foremost experts on sea level rise, materials scientists who are developing technologies to dramatically reduce carbon emissions from buildings, vehicles and other sources, and environmental scientists who are devising new strategies to monitor how air and water pollution affect the health of humans and wildlife.

Their efforts are aided by cutting-edge laboratories such as UB’s supercomputing facility, the Center for Computational Research, and planned investments including a new $102 million building to house UB’s growing engineering programs.

UB’s work to address global warming go beyond the sciences, with faculty researchers deeply engaged in the community, helping the Buffalo Niagara region transition from its industrial heyday to a more knowledge-based economy centered on advanced manufacturing, entrepreneurship and environmental justice.

These efforts were recently rewarded with a $25 million federal investment, as part of the White House’s Build Back Better Challenge, to help grow the region’s tech sector, especially on the East Side of Buffalo.

UB is also a global leader in higher education when it comes to climate action. The university was ranked No. 1 in the world in addressing the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) pertaining to climate action, according to the 2021 Times Higher Education Impact Rankings.

The university has also committed to achieving climate neutrality by 2030, a goal aided by solar arrays lining its North Campus, as well as the The GRoW Clean Energy Center, an ultra-efficient demonstration home designed by UB faculty and students that shows how UB is pushing the boundaries of innovation and design to combat climate change.

While it is believed that Harris is the first sitting vice president to visit UB, she is not the first high-ranking White House official to visit the university. Indeed, President Barack Obama visited the university in 2013 to promote efforts to improve college access and reduce student debt.

In 2019, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg visited UB to receive an honorary degree and discuss her career in law. The year before that, then-former Vice President Joe Biden appeared at UB as part of the university’s Distinguished Speakers Series. And in 2006, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama made a historic three-day visit to UB.

“As Vice President Harris’ visit to UB coincides with the beginning of our academic year, it will surely generate a great deal of positive energy during an already exciting time on campus,” Tripathi said.

READER COMMENTS

Welcome (back) to Buffalo (N.Y.), Madame Vice President.

Sherry Sherrill

Are students able to see Madame VP speak in person? Seems like it's only livestream, so what's the point of her even coming then? It would be an awesome opportunity for us to see/meet her.

Emily Sweeney

What initiatives does the United States government plan on taking to ensure that its partners in the Asia Pacific and South Asia take the necessary steps required to not only reduce their carbon footprint, but take stringent steps to help reduce global warming?

Rahat Bhalla

I hope she gets treated with the same kind of welcome Mr. Allen West received.

Anthony Cedeno

Why was only a livestream provided? Why didn't the university allow students and staff to join? Why was there no Q&A?

Chon Fai Kam

It would have been good to send out an alert that you shut down every entrance to the campus! UB police didn’t even tell me where to go to get to my classes.

UB! Students last as usual!

Daniel Gimbrone