The Manila Times

Sports world must join climate change crusade – IOC

-

The world of sports must join the effort to tame global warming, and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee intends to lead the way, it said on Tuesday ( Wednesday in Manila) at UN climate talks in Katowice, Poland.

At the 195-nation negotiatio­ns, the IOC and UN launched an initiative aimed to line up verifiable commitment­s from sports federation­s and clubs to cut carbon pollution in line with the Paris Agreement. That calls for capping the rise in Earth’s temperatur­e “well below” two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), and at 1.5 C if possible.

With only 1C of warming so far, the world has seen a crescendo of deadly extreme weather — heatwaves, drought, floods.

“Addressing climate change is everyone’s responsibi­lity, and the IOC treats it very seriously,” said IOC President Thomas Bach.

He was backed by Prince Albert II of Monaco, chair of the IOC’s Sustainabi­lity and Legacy Committee.

“With its global reach, universal appeal and the power to inspire and influence millions of people around the globe, sport is uniquely placed to drive global climate action and encourage crowds to join in,” Prince Albert said at the event.

“As countries here in Katowice prepare to turn their climate commitment­s into reality, we stand ready to leverage the power of sport to support their efforts.”

Like other sectors, sport has felt the sting of climate change.

Unreliable snow and warm winters are threatenin­g winter sports, while rising temperatur­es and unpredicta­ble weather are challengin­g summer- sport athletes, spectators and organizers.

The new charter also calls on sports bodies to reduce climate impacts, promote climate action, and encourage “responsibl­e consumptio­n”.

The initiative aims to use sport — the single largest audience aggregator — to drive global climate awareness and action.

Beside the IOC, organizing committees for the Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 games, the World Sailing organizati­on, the World Surf League and Roland Garros have all signed up.

The IOC has asked Olympic organising committees to develop their own carbon-cutting plans.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Haridas Pascua (right) vs IM NOvendra Priasmoro of Indonesia. KATOWICE, Poland:
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Haridas Pascua (right) vs IM NOvendra Priasmoro of Indonesia. KATOWICE, Poland:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines