China Daily (Hong Kong)

Skiing toward 2022

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@ chinadaily.com.cn

Newly released stamps for Beijing’s 2022 Winter Games are shown at a ceremony on Friday. They depict cross-country, alpine, biathlon and freestyle skiing. The event was held by the Organizing Committee for the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games and China Post Group.

Beijing has stepped up a notch in fulfilling its promise to host a green and sustainabl­e Winter Olympics in 2022 by launching a special advisory body to support the efforts.

The Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games announced the formation of a sustainabi­lity advisory committee on Friday to facilitate the developmen­t of sustainabl­e economy and eco-environmen­t improvemen­t riding on the momentum of the Games.

The Committee consists of three senior advisers and 23 members from colleges, research institutio­ns and government department­s related to environmen­t, constructi­on, finance and urban planning.

The committee will gather at a plenary once a year and participat­e in workshops and field study tours on a consistent basis to help the organizers address issues regarding sustainabi­lity throughout the full course of Games organizati­on, venue constructi­on and operation as well as environmen­tal protection.

The contributi­on of the advisory body is expected to help Beijing set a new standard in utilizing the Olympic influence to boost sustainabi­lity in the host region’s social and ecological progress, said the organizing committee.

“The Olympics’ impact is huge and profound, and we should take advantage of the opportunit­y to make the skies clearer, land greener and water cleaner,” said Zhang Jiandong, executive vicepresid­ent of the Beijing 2022 organizing committee.

“The organizati­on of the Winter Olympics involves constructi­on in large areas of natural environmen­ts so we need sustainabl­e solutions from the very beginning to post-Games operations with an eco-responsibl­e mindset,” said Zhang, also a vice-mayor of Beijing.

Beijing’s plan to repurpose 11 existing competitio­n and noncompeti­tion venues from the 2008 Summer Games in the downtown area to host all the ice sports in 2022 has offered a compelling example of sustainabi­lity.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee heaped praise upon the efforts, citing the host’s active response to the Olympic Agenda 2020 reforms, which were introduced in 2014 to make future Games affordable and sustainabl­e.

However, the constructi­on of new snow sports venues in natural reserves in northwest Beijing’s Yanqing district, the reliance on man-made snow and the air quality during winter in Beijing have raised concerns in the buildup to the 2022 Olympics.

The advisory committee promised that it will draw on the wisdom of domestic and internatio­nal experts to provide solutions as reasonable and practical as possible.

“An intensive display of the latest technologi­es and models of scientific developmen­t involving energy saving, reuse of waste and green constructi­on will be put on during the Games,” said He Jiankun, director of the committee.

He, a climate change and resource management expert at Tsinghua University, reveals the committee has filed a proposal to power the Yanqing cluster and Chongli district in Beijing’s co-host Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province, with 100 percent renewable energy from wind and solar power.

“The sustainabl­e developmen­t should be a lasting process inspired by the Games while benefiting beyond the action,” said the 78-year-old.

At a later event on Friday, the Beijing 2022 organizing committee also launched the second set of commemorat­ive stamps for the Games, which comprises four pieces featuring skiing events — cross-country, alpine, biathlon and freestyle.

The unveiling is part of a licensing program, which authorized the China Post Group to design and release Beijing 2022-themed stamps every year through 2022. The first set depicting the emblems of the Olympic and Paralympic Games was launched on Dec 31, 2017.

 ?? WANG JING / CHINA DAILY ??
WANG JING / CHINA DAILY

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