Exclusive: Olympics - Green Paris bid pledges to slash carbon
emissions
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[January 31, 2017]
By Karolos Grohmann
BERLIN (Reuters) - The Paris 2024
Olympics bid committee is proposing a strong eco-friendly plan that
will slash carbon emissions by more than half compared to the last
two Games in London and Rio.
Speaking to Reuters on Tuesday, three days before the third part of
their bid book is submitted to the International Olympic Committee
(IOC), bid co-president Tony Estanguet said Paris had placed
sustainability at the top of its list of priorities.
The French capital is bidding for the Olympics along with Los
Angeles and Budapest, with the IOC set to select the winning
candidate in September.
"For us it is quite simple. Our vision is the most sustainable Games
ever," Estanguet said in an interview, adding that the bid was in
line with the 2015 Paris Agreement to reduce greenhouse gases.
Estanguet said that a Games held in France would produce an
estimated 1.56 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions,
down 55 percent from the roughly 3.42 million tonnes created by the
Rio 2016 and the London 2012 Games.
"The experts we used to asses the project are exactly the same ones
who evaluated the carbon footprint for the past Games," the
three-time Olympic canoeing champion and IOC member said.
The use of existing venues and temporary structures has helped
Estanguet believe that the bid's goal was realistic, with the
construction of an aquatics center regarded as the only new major
legacy project.
Public or shared transport would be used for 100 percent of
spectators while 85 percent of athletes would be housed within 30
minutes of their competition venues.
"We have a very strong concept. We will also have low carbon
installations for the rare venues we have to build and we will use
specific materials to reduce the overall carbon footprint," he said.
CONTRASTING CONCEPTS
"We also have all the infrastructure -- roads, hotels, airports --
already in place. That allows us to claim we will be the most
sustainable Games ever."
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The logo of the Paris candidacy for the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic
Games is pictured in Paris, France, February 17, 2016.
REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
The IOC passed a series of reforms in 2014 called Agenda 2020, aimed
at making the Games more attractive to future hosts after a string
of candidate cities withdrew due to the sheer size and costs of
organizing such an ambitious project.
The 2024 campaign has already witnessed several withdrawals, with
Hamburg, Boston and Rome dropping out of the running.
The remaining cities are pitching contrasting concepts to the IOC,
with Paris offering a compact Games in a city that last hosted the
Olympics in 1924.
Two-time hosts Los Angeles is highlighting its "risk-free" plan,
with the vast majority of venues and athletes' villages already in
place, and minimal construction required.
Budapest is proposing a model for a medium-sized city as a choice
that offers an alternative to traditional big cities of the past,
paving the way for new potential bidders.
"For us the legacy of the Games will not be in equipment. We want to
invest our money, time, energy in leaving a legacy for people in the
way of educating them," Estanguet added.
"We want more people to practice sport and... during the seven years
(of preparations), we want to educate people on sustainability."
(Editing by John O'Brien)
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