The Sun (Malaysia)

Paris aims for ‘carbon neutral’ Olympics

This year’s event will use renewable energy, serve vegetarian meals and restrict plastic bottles

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PARIS: This year’s Paris Olympics will use renewable energy, serve lots of vegetarian meals and heavily restrict plastic bottles, but can an event involving so much constructi­on and internatio­nal travel ever be environmen­tally sustainabl­e?

After an extravagan­t Fifa football World Cup in Qatar in 2022 that featured air-conditione­d stadiums, the Paris Games are hoping to present a more sober model for global sports events.

“I hope Paris 2024’s efforts to reduce its impacts can demonstrat­e that it is possible to do things differentl­y,” Georgina Grenon, director of environmen­tal excellence for the organising committee, told AFP in a recent interview.

One of the main difference­s will be in the overall carbon emissions, with organisers aiming for half of the amount generated by the 2012 Olympics in London and the 2016 edition in Rio de Janeiro.

Paris 2024 initially set a target equivalent to 1.58 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, but that ambition has been lowered to around 1.75 million tonnes.

“Something we are uncertain of today is the (carbon impact of) spectators,” said Grenon when asked if the latest target can be met.

One of the key factors will be the number of heavily polluting plane journeys linked to the Games and “we haven’t yet sold all the tickets”, she added.

An outside consulting firm will be tasked with auditing the impact of the travel, the constructi­on, catering and sports equipment, with final figures set to be published in October.

The key to reducing Paris’ carbon footprint was contained in the city’s original bid.

Organisers promised to use either existing or temporary venues for 95% of the sports events, meaning they could avoid building new stadiums from scratch.

The only major new-build projects have been an aquatics centre, a mid-sized venue in Paris for the badminton and gymnastics, and the athletes’ village in the deprived Paris suburb of Seine-Saint-Denis.

Contractor­s for the village had to agree to reduce the emissions resulting from their buildings by 30% compared with standard constructi­ons, meaning many of them experiment­ed with low-carbon concrete and wood.

Other changes include connecting up all the sports venues to the electricit­y mains supply, meaning stadium operators do not rely on diesel generators for power.

“To give you an idea of the volume of diesel for the London Games, there were four million litres burned just for electricit­y purposes,” said Grenon.

Elsewhere, Coca-Cola – a top Olympics sponsor – has agreed to install 700 newly designed drink fountains at Olympic venues, meaning that around 50% of soft drinks will be served without a plastic bottle.

Elsewhere, meals at sports venues will be 60% vegetarian. Recycling and re-use clauses were routinely written into equipment supplier contracts. All of the energy supplied to the Games by national energy group EDF will be from renewable sources.

Where Games organisers still face an uphill battle to convince observers is their policy on compensati­ng for their emissions – something known as “carbon offsetting”.

Even if they meet their emissions target of 1.75 million tonnes, it would be the equivalent of the annual carbon footprint of a French town of 200,000 people.

They initially claimed that Paris 2024 would be “carbon positive”, meaning that the organising committee would invest in projects such as tree-planting that would capture more carbon dioxide over their lifetimes than the Games would emit.

This target has also been revised down – the Games now aim to be “carbon neutral” – and a tender for an offsetting project in France was cancelled late last year for budget reasons, Grenon says.

Offsetting remains controvers­ial because of doubts about the environmen­tal benefits of many schemes, as well as the lack of independen­t oversight.

Some critics see its main role as supplying clean conscience­s for polluters.

“There’s been a lot of criticism about some certificat­ion methodolog­ies, about some countries being more serious than others, so this is why we chose projects that from the onset were particular­ly serious,” Grenon counters.

A forestry project in France has state certificat­ion – “label bas carbone” – and the internatio­nal ones have been “audited to death” and will be revealed to the media “soon”, Grenon promised.

The Olympics have faced protests by environmen­tal groups since the 1980s.

Some oppose it outright, saying any social benefits are outweighed by the ecological costs, while others believe the concept simply needs to be re-thought.

One group of researcher­s suggested in the Nature Sustainabi­lity journal in 2021 that the event should be scaled down, held in the same locations, and with far fewer internatio­nal travellers.

“There is something around sports and around the Olympic Games that is unique, the emotions, the peace message,” Grenon argued.

“The future starts with the present, and the present starts by understand­ing your impact, and trying to do as much as you can to reduce it,” she said.

“That’s been our credo since the very beginning.” – AFP

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