Two Canadian universities place among top 10 in global sustainability rankings
Times Higher Education (THE) has released its 2026 Sustainability Impact Ratings, with Queen's University and the University of Alberta both landing in the global top 10.
A university’s overall rank is based on its alignment with the United Nations' 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), such as no poverty, climate action, and gender equality.
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More than 1,600 universities were assessed to create the 2026 rankings, with four broad areas examined to assess sustainability: research, stewardship, outreach, and teaching.
THE published this list on June 23, 2026.
National rank
In 2026, Canada was the only North American country to place among the global top 10.
A total of 20 Canadian universities made it onto THE’s overall 2026 global ranking, and four were among the top 20:
| National rank | University | Top SDG strength | Global rank | Overall score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Queen’s University | Sustainable Cities | 4 | 97.5 |
| 2 | University of Alberta | Industry & Innovation | 10 | 96.0 |
| 3 | Western University | Industry & Innovation | 12 | 95.9 |
| 4 | McMaster University | Industry & Innovation | 18 | 95.5 |
| 5 | University of Victoria | Life on Land | 27 | 94.6 |
| 6 | Simon Fraser University | Sustainable Cities | 52 | 92.2 |
| 7 | Université Laval | Climate Action | 68 | 91.0 |
| 8 | York University | Industry & Innovation | 78 | 90.5 |
| 9 | Dalhousie University | Life Below Water | 90 | 89.7 |
| 10 | Lakehead University | No Poverty | 101-200 | 82.3–89.2 |
| 11 | Toronto Metropolitan University | Responsible Consumption | 101-200 | 82.3–89.2 |
| 12 | University of Saskatchewan | Industry & Innovation | 101-200 | 82.3–89.2 |
| 13 | Wilfred Laurier University | Clean Water | 101-200 | 82.3–89.2 |
| 14 | University of Manitoba | Good Health | 201-300 | 77.5–82.2 |
| 15 | Carleton University | Industry & Innovation | 301-400 | 73.9–77.4 |
| 16 | Brock University | Reducing Inequalities | 401-600 | 66.2–73.8 |
| 17 | Thompson Rivers University | Climate Action | 401-600 | 66.2–73.8 |
| 18 | Trent University | Life on Land | 401-600 | 66.2–73.8 |
| 19 | University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC) | Climate Action | 601-800 | 60.7–66.1 |
| 20 | University of Regina | Decent Work | 601-800 | 60.7–66.1 |
This year, Queen’s University moved up two ranks, while Alberta fell by two.
The “=” symbol indicates the university tied with another for that rank, having the same overall score based on SDG progression.
Three Canadian universities tied with others:
- Simon Fraser University for 52nd place with the Hong Kong Polytechnic University and the University of Leeds;
- Université Laval for 68th place with Hong Kong Baptist University and the University of Galway; and
- York University for 78th place with the University of Pretoria.
The global top 10
This year’s sustainability impact rankings saw universities across Canada, Asia, Europe, and Oceania make the top 10 list.
There were two ties in the global top 10, one of which saw the National Taiwan University tie with the University of Alberta for 10th place.
The most common SDG strength among the global top 10 was Industry & Innovation (SDG 9).
| Rank | University | Top SDG strength | Overall score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | University of Manchester | Life on Land | 98.5 |
| 2 | Griffith University | Life Below Water | 97.9 |
| 3 | Western Sydney University | Life on Land | 97.8 |
| 4 | Queen’s University | Sustainable Cities | 97.5 |
| 5 | Universiti Sains Malasia | No Poverty | 97.3 |
| 6 | Hanyang University | Industry & Innovation | 96.8 |
| 7 | Hokkaido University | Industry & Innovation | 96.3 |
| 7 | Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia | Sustainable Cities | 96.3 |
| 9 | Institut Agro | Life on Land | 96.1 |
| 10 | National Taiwan University (NTU) | Industry & Innovation | 96.0 |
| =10 | University of Alberta | Industry & Innovation | 96.0 |
This year’s top 10 list features five universities that made the list in 2025 including both Canadian universities, as well as the University of Manchester, Griffith University, and Western Sydney University.
Last year, the top three educational institutions were (in order) Western Sydney University, the University of Manchester, and Kyungpook National University (KNU).
Notably absent from the 2026 Sustainability Impact Ratings are three of Canada's most prominent universities: the University of Toronto, the University of British Columbia, and McGill University.
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Methodology
For the 2026 Sustainability Impact Ratings, THE evaluated a total of 1,646 universities from 116 countries and territories.
The report assessed each university’s progress on the United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The “four core pillars of evaluation” used to solidify a university’s rankings:
- Research: How universities contribute to the SDGs through academic research in areas linked to sustainability and global development.
- Stewardship: How institutions manage their resources, including their facilities, staff, faculty, and students, in ways that support sustainable development.
- Outreach: How universities engage with communities and partners beyond campus to promote sustainability at the local, regional, national, and international levels.
- Teaching: How universities prepare students to become informed, skilled professionals who can apply sustainability principles in their future careers.
You can find the UN’s 17 SDGs, including the broad indicators attached to each, below:
The United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals
To be included in these rankings, a university must submit data on SDG 17, and a minimum of three other SDGs.
This is because a university’s overall ranking is determined by combining its SDG 17 score with its three strongest results across the other 16 SDGs.
SDG 17 makes up 22% of the total, while the other SDGs each account for 26%.
SDG 1: no poverty
- Research on poverty (27%)
- Proportion of students receiving financial aid (27%)
- University anti-poverty programmes (23%)
- Community anti-poverty programmes (23%)
SDG 2: zero hunger
- Research related to hunger (27%)
- Campus food waste (15.4%)
- Student hunger (19.2%)
- Proportion of graduates in food sustainability (19.2%)
- National hunger (19.2%)
SDG 3: good health and well-being
- Research on health and well-being (27%)
- Proportion of health graduates (34.6%)
- Collaborations and health services (38.4%)
SDG 4: quality education
- Research on early years and lifelong learning education (27%)
- Proportion of graduates with a teaching qualification (15.4%)
- Lifelong learning measures (26.8%)
- Proportion of first-generation students (30.8%)
SDG 5: gender equality
- Research on the study of gender equality (27%)
- Proportion of first-generation female students (15.4%)
- Student access measures (15.4%)
- Proportion of senior female academics (15.4%)
- Proportion of women receiving degrees (11.5%)
- Women’s progress measures (15.3%)
SDG 6: clean water and sanitation
- Research on clean water and sanitation (27%)
- Water consumption (19%)
- Water care (23%)
- Water reuse (12%)
- Water in the community (19%)
SDG 7: affordable and clean energy
- Research on affordable and clean energy (27%)
- Clean energy measures (23%)
- Energy use (17%)
- Energy and the community (23%)
- Low-carbon energy use (10%)
SDG 8: decent work and economic growth
- Research on economic growth and employment (27%)
- Employment practices (19.6%)
- Expenditure per employee (15.4%)
- Proportion of students taking work placements (19%)
- Proportion of employees on secure contracts (19%)
SDG 9: industry, innovation and infrastructure
- Research on industry, innovation and infrastructure (11.6%)
- Patents (15.4%)
- University spin-offs (34.6%)
- Research income from industry (38.4%)
SDG 10: reduced inequalities
- Research on reduced inequalities (27%)
- First-generation students (15.5%)
- Students from developing countries (15.5%)
- Proportion of students and staff with disabilities (23%)
- Measures against discrimination (19%)
SDG 11: sustainable cities and communities
- Research on sustainable cities and communities (27%)
- Support of arts and heritage (22.6%)
- Expenditure on arts and heritage (15.3%)
- Sustainable practices (35.1%)
SDG 12: responsible consumption and production
- Research on responsible consumption and production (27%)
- Operational measures (26.7%)
- Proportion of recycled waste (27%)
- Publication of a sustainability report (19.3%)
SDG 13: climate action
- Research on climate action (27%)
- Low-carbon energy use (27%)
- Environmental education measures (23%)
- Carbon neutrality (23%)
SDG 14: life below water
- Research on life below water (27%)
- Education related to aquatic ecosystems (15.3%)
- Supporting aquatic ecosystems (19.4%)
- Water-sensitive waste disposal (19.3%)
- Maintaining a local ecosystem (19%)
SDG 15: life on land
- Research on life on land (27%)
- Education related to land ecosystems (23%)
- Supporting land ecosystems through action (27%)
- Land-sensitive waste disposal (23%)
SDG 16: peace, justice and strong institutions
- Research on peace and justice (27%)
- University governance measures (26.6%)
- Working with government (23.2%)
- Proportion of graduates in law and civil enforcement (23.2%)
SDG 17: partnerships for the goals
- Research relating to the SDGs or with lower- or lower-middle-income countries (27.1%)
- Relationships to support the goals (18.5%)
- Publication of SDG reports (27.2%)
- Education on the SDGs (27.2%)
The 2026 rankings mark the eighth edition of THE's Sustainability Impact Ratings, previously known as THE Impact Rankings.
THE is best known for its World University Rankings, also published annually—one of the most widely cited global university rankings systems.
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