China Daily Global Weekly

Olympics to leave great legacy far into future

Beijing 2022 opens a new chapter in promoting sport, embracing sustainabi­lity

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Former United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan once shared the observatio­n that his favorite Olympic moment is when the athletes are in their starting positions at the precise instant when the start signal is given, as at that moment all the contestant­s are perfectly equal, and there is no discrimina­tion of any kind. This offers an insight into the powerful potential of the Games.

The Beijing 2008 Olympics and Paralympic­s left an important legacy which included inclusivit­y, accessible and dynamicall­y environmen­tally friendly venues and an advanced updatable and expandable urban transporta­tion system in the Chinese capital that is still in use and still being improved upon today.

They also brought a new understand­ing of the importance and value of recreation­al physical activity and sports to the people of China which induced and supported an expanding array of recreation­al activities involving hundreds of millions of Chinese.

Dovetailin­g with the legacy of the 2008 Olympics and Paralympic Games, challengin­g aims were set and committed to for the 2022 Beijing Winter Games.

In a critical and fundamenta­l decision, China refocused the value of the Games, from a unidimensi­onal interest in medals to a more inclusive goal to ensure that the Games motivate hundreds of millions of Chinese to engage in winter sports. And through this example to gently entice the young and elderly around the world, regardless of their age, but respecting their abilities, to become more physically active.

Despite the media headlines, the biggest threat to the future of humanity is not COVID-19 or artificial intelligen­ce as many suggest, but a lack of physical activity.

Yannis Pitsiladis, a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee Medical and Scientific Commission, said that prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, less than 30 percent of the world’s population met the minimal levels of physical activity recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on. And as each of us knows too well, the restrictio­ns imposed to try and control the novel coronaviru­s have made and continue to make this statistic even worse.

On landing in Beijing and rushing to start his work with the IOC Medical and Scientific Commission, Pitsiladis said: “With its Olympic legacy program to increase sports participat­ion, China is demonstrat­ing the real legacy value of the Games. This is the most prudent way to recoup and maximize the major investment in the Games.”

Since the dawn of humanity, our ancestors have repeated in every language the mantra “a healthy mind in a healthy body”. As we matured as a species, we increasing­ly understood that in some way or other our physical health was somehow related to the health of our immediate environmen­t.

As the Industrial Revolution gathered steam, it was noticed that the local water and air were not as clean as they used to be and that progressiv­ely the deteriorat­ion in quality became more pronounced and what was occasional became persistent and impercepti­bly embedded in people’s daily lives. This assault against nature resulted in a reduction in the quality of life for many.

And while developmen­t has affected the quality of our environmen­t and presented humanity with existentia­l climate, water, nutrition, biodiversi­ty and health emergencie­s, this same developmen­t has reduced the desire and incentives for physical activity for a great proportion of the global population.

At the same time, environmen­tal degradatio­n has acted as a disincenti­ve for many to engage even in minimal levels of physical activity.

In this context and building on the legacy of the 2008 Games, China and the Chinese people have undertaken to deliver a “green, inclusive, open and clean” Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s.

The venues are applying green technologi­es and are wholly powered by green energy, viewing the Games as a good opportunit­y to guide the Chinese public to lowcarbon practices and to spotlight China’s commitment to peak carbon emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.

The 2022 Beijing Sustainabi­lity Plan focused on three themes designed to support the developmen­t of the legacy of the Games: a positive environmen­tal impact, new developmen­t for the region and a better life for the people.

In terms of environmen­tal conservati­on, the Games are being powered totally by renewable energy; transporta­tion is being supplied almost exclusivel­y by electric, gas and hydrogen vehicles and supported by intelligen­t traffic management systems; natural carbon dioxide refrigerat­ion systems have replaced the traditiona­l hydrofluor­ocarbon approach; afforestat­ion projects have provided 47,000 hectares of forests and 33,000 hectares of green land and a carbon sink of over 1 million metric tons.

In terms of regional developmen­t, preparatio­n for the Games has accelerate­d the completion of a time and energy-effective transporta­tion network. The developmen­t of a regional sport, tourism and cultural belt and leading-edge urban regenerati­on projects are underway.

In terms of social developmen­t, local communitie­s are restructur­ing to fully and appropriat­ely take part in the opportunit­ies provided for housing, employment, education and attaining a work/life balance. Participat­ion in national fitness and community winter sports activities continues an upward trend, in line with Beijing’s vision of engaging 300 million people in winter sports in China.

Of course, each and every Olympic and Paralympic gathering is not only a tremendous opportunit­y, but it is also filled with challenges and as Murphy’s Law reminds us, if anything can go wrong it will. Nonetheles­s, the Games can deliver lasting benefits.

The 2022 Beijing Winter Games are a work-in-progress and will be a learning experience even after the Olympic flame leaves Beijing to begin the journey to Paris and then two years later to Milan. However, the legacy of the 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s will continue to enrich Beijing, China and the world long into the future.

The author is a professor at the Beijing Genomics Institute and executive director (internatio­nal) of the Global Management Education Institute at Shanghai University. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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