NHL
to purchase carbon offsets to counter playoff air travel
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[April 23, 2019]
By Rory Carroll
(Reuters) - The National Hockey League
said on Monday it would purchase carbon credits to offset airline
emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases during the Stanley Cup
playoffs.
For the first round of the playoffs, which has the highest number of
teams traveling and is currently underway, the NHL will offset more
than 465 metric tons of carbon emissions, equivalent to taking 99
cars off the road for one year.
The league will purchase the offsets from Portland, Oregon-based
Bonneville Environmental Foundation, which operates offset projects
that capture or cut greenhouse gases emitted from animal waste,
landfills and fossil fuel use.
The announcement, which coincides with Earth Day, is part of the
NHL's efforts to address climate change.
Last season the NHL published its second Sustainability Report,
which examined its commitment to ensure all levels of hockey -- from
the frozen ponds it was invented on to professional arenas -- thrive
for future generations.
The report estimated that in the coming decades the average length
of the skating season may shrink by one third in eastern Canada and
by 20 percent in western Canada.
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A view of the Stanley Cup Playoffs logo on a hat in the team store
prior to game three of the first round of the 2019 Stanley Cup
Playoffs between the the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Columbus Blue
Jackets at Nationwide Arena. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-USA
TODAY Sports/File Photo
In response the league has ramped up efforts at its arenas to cut
carbon emissions, reduce waste and conserve water, among other
initiatives.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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