Advocates cast doubt on Qatar's carbon neutral World Cup efforts
Send a link to a friend
[May 31, 2022] By
Andrew Mills and Jake Spring
DOHA (Reuters) - Climate advocates have cast doubt on Qatar's
efforts to host soccer's first carbon-neutral FIFA World Cup by
offsetting or eliminating emissions that contribute to global
warming, according to a report released Tuesday.
Organisers in the Gulf Arab state are omitting some greenhouse gas
emissions from their calculations and will rely on flimsy carbon
offsets to reach carbon neutrality, said the report, complied by
Carbon Market Watch, an advocacy group.
In a statement, Qatar's tournament organisers dismissed the
conclusions as speculative, saying emissions will be calculated
using "best-in practice" methods after the tournament ends to ensure
they are based on actual activities.
Qatar, the world's largest producer of natural gas, pledged to host
a carbon neutral tournament when it bid for the event more than 11
years ago.
"Can they claim it's a carbon neutral event at this point? Too
early," said Fengqi You, an energy systems engineer at Cornell
University.
That will depend on factors like how many people will attend, You
said.
Carbon Market Watch criticised Qatar's method of spreading the
emissions from building stadiums over the lifetime of the facility,
rather than counting it all toward the World Cup. But that is a
common practice, You said.
[to top of second column] |
General view inside the Lusail Stadium, the venue for the 2022 Qatar
World Cup Final REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski
The academic said it would be impossible for the
event to reach carbon neutrality without buying offsets. Once the
event is over and all emissions are accounted for, offsetting it all
is a question of how much money Qatar is willing to spend buying
offsets, generally backed by carbon negative activities like
planting trees, he said.
The decision to offset its emissions should be "recognized rather
than criticized," a spokesperson for the tournament organisers, the
Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy, said in a statement.
Qatar's organisers have highlighted the tournament's carbon limiting
efforts, such as introducing solar-powered stadium air conditioning,
building a reusable stadium from shipping containers and the fact
that fans won't need to fly from one match to the next in tiny
Qatar.
But Carbon Market Watch's report cast doubt on several initiatives,
like a large-scale grass farm that Qatar, which has negligible water
resources, has built in the desert to produce stadium-ready turf.
(https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/
qatars-world-cup-turf-needs-chilled-stadiums-desalinated-water-thrive-2022-02-21)
(Reporting and writing by Andrew Mills; Additional reporting by Jake
Spring from Sao Paulo, Brazil; Editing by David Gregorio)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |