Olympic wave riders in frontline of
climate change
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[February 14, 2020]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Of all the sports at the Tokyo Olympics
later this year none inhabit the frontline of climate change quite
like surfing.
Which is why when the wave sport makes its debut on Chiba's
Tsurigasaki Beach, there will be more than gold medals at stake.
As well as showcasing the world's elite surfers to a brand new
audience, International Surfing Association (ISA) president Fernando
Aguerre says the goal will be to also highlight the growing threat
to the planet's oceans.
Surfers, he says, are the ambassadors of the oceans and the eyes of
the world when it comes to the health of the seas.
"We are the guinea pigs of society when it comes to the what's going
on in the oceans," Aguerre told Reuters by telephone from his home
beach of Mar del Plata in Argentina, where the day before he took
part in a huge litter sweep along some of the resort's golden sands.
"We surfers, we live on the ocean, we literally submerge ourselves,
we have ocean water into our ears, eyes and skin. In reality we are
the perfect ambassadors of the ocean.
"We see the damage and degradation that is being done."
While sewage and industrial pollution have long been a blight on the
habitat of surfers, an existential threat is the predicted sea-level
changes brought about by global warming.
According to a 2017 study by Dan Reineman of Stanford University's
School of Earth, Energy and Environmental Science faculty, 18% of
California's most popular surfing breaks could be drowned and 16%
could deteriorate.
A Californian climate change assessment report in 2018 predicts
two-thirds of the state's southern beaches could be completely
eroded by the end of the century.
With sea walls and housing preventing the natural movement inland of
beaches, surfers will face the squeeze, even if predicted more
frequent storms whip up large waves.
"There will always be a place where the land meets the sea, there
will always be waves," Aguerre said.
"But when it comes to the impact of climate change on our sport we
don't have a doubt about it. We see the diminishing fish, the impact
of sewers, the industrial pollution, we see the erosion of the
beaches and reefs.
"It's a huge challenge. If the places where waves break change, some
of the greatest surfing places might disappear."
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John John Florence of Hawaii surfs during the final of World Surf
League's (WSL) championship at Supertubo beach in Peniche, Portugal
October 25, 2016. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante/File Photo
LEAD BY EXAMPLE
Aguerre, who made it his life's work to introduce surfing to the
Olympics, is not one to drown in gloom and describes himself as a
"pro-active pessimist" when it comes to the threat the planet faces
from man-made climate change.
"Optimists think everything will be okay, pessimists say there's
nothing we can do, we're screwed, I think we are in trouble, but
it's not too late," he said.
Aguerre believes the Olympic movement under Thomas Bach's reign has
woken up to sport's responsibility to lead by example.
"Maybe 20 or 30 years ago the Olympic movement didn't really care
much about environmental problems," he said.
"But with Bach nobody has a doubt that what happens to the earth and
the environment happens to all of us, including athletes, not just
Olympic athletes, it happens to everybody.
"The good thing is that surfing is going to have millions of eyes on
it this year. That will give us power because people will see the
passion for the ocean.
"I wake up every morning full of hope. The motto of the ISA is not
all power to surfing. The motto is let's have a better world for
surfing. We believe surfing has a role to play."
While surfing's environmental impact at this year's Games will be
minimal, the likely choice of Tahiti to stage the Paris 2024 surfing
events has raised some eyebrows.
Aguerre accepts the distance is 'challenging' but says taking
surfing to its spiritual roots is the right decision.
"It's the cradle of the sport," he said. "We hold a Pro Tour event
with more surfers there every year anyway, it's not like we're doing
anything that has not been done before."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
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