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Ideally situated in the 5th best student city in the UK (QS Best Student Cities 2026), Northumbria University is a UK Top 40 University (Complete University Guide 2026) with a diverse community of 34,500 students from over 140 countries.
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Discover moreNorthumbria University is working to reduce the environmental impact of its digital infrastructure while supporting secure, accessible and effective digital services for staff and students. As digital technologies become increasingly important in teaching, research and university operations, we recognise our responsibility to manage their environmental footprint and promote sustainable digital practices.
This page outlines our approach to sustainable digital infrastructure, including data centres, procurement, website performance, artificial intelligence, energy consumption and electronic waste management.
Northumbria is reducing the environmental impact of our digital infrastructure through the use of renewable energy and energy-efficient technologies in data centre operations.
The University's cloud-hosted services are delivered through facilities that use low-carbon energy sources. Northumbria’s cloud based services are hosted by the Stellium Data Centre, located in Newcastle and powered by on-site photovoltaic (PV) panels and REGO-certified renewable electricity generated by the Port of Blyth wind farm, helping to reduce the carbon footprint associated with digital services and data storage.
Our on-campus data centre is designed to operate as efficiently as possible while maintaining the reliability and resilience required for critical services, with campus electricity supplied through green energy contracts. Cooling systems represent a significant proportion of data centre energy consumption and Northumbria uses Optimum Air Con, an innovative cooling technology developed on campus by Dr Muhammad Wakil Shahzad, Associate Professor in Mechanical and Construction Engineering. The technology has been designed to improve cooling efficiency while reducing energy demand, supporting both operational performance and sustainability objectives.
Alongside improving the efficiency of our digital infrastructure, we encourage staff and students to reduce unnecessary digital storage and support initiatives such as Northumbria’s Digital Clean Up Day, helping to reduce demand for data storage and associated energy consumption.
While data centres operate behind the scenes, the way we use digital services affects how much storage, processing power and network capacity is required.
Staff and students can help by:
Reducing digital clutter helps lower demand on storage infrastructure and the energy required to maintain it.
Northumbria University's Sustainable Procurement Policy requires environmental considerations to be integrated into purchasing decisions.
Procurement of our servers is undertaken through nationally recognised frameworks such as the Southern Universities Procurement Consortia Servers, Storage and Solutions National Agreement, which incorporates sustainability requirements and environmental assessment criteria at Framework level.
When procuring digital infrastructure, cloud hosting, servers and related IT services, environmental performance is considered alongside security, reliability, accessibility and value for money.
Suppliers are expected to demonstrate recognised environmental management and energy management standards where applicable, including:
As part of the procurement process, suppliers are required to confirm whether the services provided to Northumbria University fall within the scope of a certified Environmental Management System such as ISO 14001:2015 and provide details of:
These requirements ensure that environmental sustainability is embedded in procurement decisions and that suppliers are accountable for the environmental impact of the services they provide.
Everyone can contribute to more sustainable procurement by making the most of existing equipment before requesting replacements. Extending the lifespan of equipment reduces both carbon emissions and electronic waste.
Staff and students are encouraged to:
Northumbria seeks to minimise the environmental impact of its websites and online services by reducing unnecessary data transfer and improving digital efficiency. One of the key measures is the removal redundant, outdated and duplicated web content, which reduces bandwidth requirements, improves user experience and lowers the energy associated with delivering digital services.
The way we create and share digital content can significantly affect data transfer and energy consumption. Small changes can reduce storage requirements and lower the environmental impact of digital services.
Staff and students can help by:
Digital infrastructure contributes to the University's carbon footprint through data storage, cloud computing, networking equipment, websites and end-user devices.
Northumbria seeks to reduce these emissions by:
As part of our commitment to reducing the environmental impact of digital infrastructure, Northumbria University participates in Digital Clean Up Day and promotes year-round digital housekeeping practices.
In support of Northumbria’s Digital Clean Up Day 2026, staff and students were encouraged to reduce their digital storage footprint and build sustainable digital habits. The campaign highlighted the environmental and financial impacts of storing unnecessary data across cloud storage, email systems and collaborative platforms.
The University's five-day Digital Clean Up programme focused on:
Staff and students were encouraged to remove redundant files, duplicate documents, outdated downloads and unnecessary emails while ensuring that important University records continued to be retained in accordance with institutional requirements.
Users were advised that personal files, duplicate content and documents that had exceeded their retention period could be deleted, while student records, research data, financial information and other University records should be retained in line with the University's Records Retention Schedule.
By reducing unnecessary digital storage, the University can lower demand on data storage infrastructure, improve information management and reduce the environmental impact associated with storing and processing digital information.
Reducing digital emissions is a shared responsibility.
You can help by:
Every file stored, transferred or processed has an associated environmental impact so responsible digital housekeeping makes a difference.
As a large organisation with thousands of staff and students, Northumbria uses a significant amount of energy. We continuously monitor and manage energy usage across our estate, implementing measures to improve efficiency and reduce waste.
Our Sustainability Plan and Annual Sustainability Report outline further initiatives being explored to reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions.
Turning off your PC at the end of the day can save up to 88% of the power consumed compared with leaving it in standby mode overnight.
Printing also requires significant energy as well as physical resources such as toner and paper. To reduce waste, DTS-managed printers are configured by default to print double-sided and in black and white. Managed printers also enter standby mode when not in use.
You can reduce your personal IT carbon footprint by:
The University promotes sustainable printing practices by reducing unnecessary printing, encouraging digital workflows and purchasing environmentally responsible printing equipment and consumables.
Staff and students are encouraged to:
Artificial intelligence (AI) tools offer significant opportunities for learning, research and productivity. However, they also present environmental, ethical and operational risks.
Northumbria provides guidance and approved AI tools to support responsible and effective use.
Users remain responsible for all work submitted, published or shared, regardless of whether AI tools have been used in its creation. AI-generated content should be reviewed, verified and appropriately acknowledged where required.
AI systems can generate inaccurate, misleading or fabricated information. Outputs should always be checked against reliable sources before use in academic, professional or operational settings.
Users should not enter confidential, personal or sensitive University information into public AI systems unless explicitly authorised and compliant with data protection requirements.
AI-generated content may create copyright, intellectual property and licensing risks. Staff and students are responsible for ensuring that their use of AI complies with legal and University requirements.
AI systems require substantial computing power and energy/water usage. Users are encouraged to apply AI proportionately and consider whether simpler digital methods can achieve the same outcome. Northumbria uses Claude for Education, a specialised version of the Claude AI assistant, developed by Anthropic to be used by higher education institutions. It provides secure and reliable AI access to students, faculty, and staff, aiming to enhance teaching, learning, and administrative workflows. Anthropic has pledged to cover 100% of grid upgrade costs for its data centres, invest in curtailment systems to reduce power use at peak demand, deploy water-efficient cooling and help bring new green power generation online.
Further guidance is available through the University's AI resources, including Claude for Education and associated staff and student guidance.
When using AI tools, staff and students should:
Responsible AI use helps ensure that the benefits of AI are realised while minimising environmental, ethical and legal risks.
In 2025/26 the equivalent weight of one and a half double-decker buses of IT equipment was given a second life through Northumbria's IT Asset Management programme. A total of 18.2 tonnes of IT equipment was repaired, reused or recycled in a single year.
Students facing financial hardship were among the direct beneficiaries, with more than 150 devices refurbished and redistributed. The initiative also supported the North Tyneside Learning Trust, helping young people remain engaged with education.
Rather than replacing equipment as a matter of course, the University's IT Asset Management Team assesses every device at the end of its initial lifecycle.
Where possible, equipment is:
The University also runs IT Amnesty initiatives to encourage the collection and responsible disposal of unwanted technology.
Help reduce e-waste by:
Northumbria University will continue to review and improve its digital sustainability practices in line with sector best practice, technological developments and the University's wider sustainability commitments.
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Page last updated 10/07/26