ASU College Student Starts GreenSummit
When Chris Samila an Arizona State University student took a trip to Costa Rica to see the Arenal Volcano, he noticed that many homes in Costa Rica used compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs).
Instantly, a light went on in his head.
“In the middle of the jungle, they're using CFLs. Why not here?” he asked himself.
Samila, a senior in ASU's School of Global Studies, also began to realize that he and his generation would be the ones most affected by the depletion of the world's resources.
“I really did not realize the global scope of the issue until I began studying here,” Samila says. “The school also opened my eyes to the global economic potential of making America a strong leader in sustainable technology.
All of those thoughts coalesced, with help from the School of Global Studies Student Association and other organizations, to produce the Green Summit, a one-day sustainability event that took place on ASU’s Tempe campus in April 2007.
When he organized last year's first GreenSummit, Chris Samila never imagined that anyone but students would come, and perhaps residents of Tempe and Phoenix.
But they did come, and the summit was so successful that Samila has planned a second summit, set for September 5-6, 2008 at the Phoenix Convention Center.
And it will become a nationwide event, Samila says. He already is planning to hold a GreenSummit in Atlanta next year, and he has his sights set on other cities in the United States.
It's one of the most affordable conferences in America given the wide range of sustainability topics and number of presenters.
“The goal of the summit goes beyond conserving paper,” Samila says. “It is designed to be a catalyst for change.”
The GreenSummit will have a number of components this year. There will be a two-day conference for both professionals and consumers, offering more than 100 educational sessions, and an exhibition hall with more than 120 exhibitors with cutting-edge green products and services.
There also will be networking events, a green industry career fair and green building tours around the Valley.
Samila expects more than 10,000 people to attend, including a delegation from Eastern Europe that the U.S. Department of Commerce is bringing to showcase American innovations and ideas revolving around sustainability.
“This year, we have organized the Green Innovations Expo into 10 categories to help manage the expansive and complex idea of sustainability,” says Samila.
“These categories help define the diverse variety of ideas, products and research in order to highlight how sustainability affects your personal and professional life.”
The categories include Green Building Design, Green Chemistry Materials, Business Products and Services, Renewable Energy, Transportation, Greener Computing, Fashion, and Beauty among others.
Samila says people often ask him how he has the time to produce such a large conference, in record speed, while he is still an undergraduate student.
“My answer is that I'm a ‘permanent senior’ at the moment. I hope this will be a permanent career for me.”
2008 GreenSummit Expo and Conference
The Natural Resources Defense Council's online magazine Onearth featured Chris Samila in an article called, "Most Likely to Succeed" which you can read HERE.












