Environment
Takes Centre Stage in Countdown to the 2008 Summer Olympics
Beijing/Nairobi, 18 November
2005 - An agreement aimed a making the summer Olympics
of 2008 environmentally-friendly was signed today signed
by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and
the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games
(BOCOG).
The agreement rests on the ambitious programmes of Beijing
in areas ranging from air, water and noise pollution up
to transport, landscaping and the disposal of solid waste.
A key part of the plan and one in which UNEP will be actively
involved is in the area of public awareness campaigns.
In doing so the UN environment body hopes to leave a lasting
legacy in China and beyond on the links between mass participation
events and a healthy environment.
The campaigns will also link the importance of the environment
generally in delivering sustainable development that benefits
current and future generations.
In exactly 993 days, the next Olympic Summer Games will
open in Beijing, China. The Games are set to follow in
the footsteps of earlier Olympics, including Torino 2006,
in promoting and respecting a healthier environment.
Klaus Toepfer, UNEP’s Executive Director, said today at
the signing ceremony: "Environment is one of the
three pillars of sustainable development- development
that respects people and the planet. Through sports and
through the Olympic movement we can further this goal
by holding games that minimize their environmental footprint
and maximize the efficient use of resources”.
“Beijing has committed itself to very high and ambitious
environmental goals, ones which if achieved will percolate
out into Chinese society and out into the world as a whole.
UNEP is delighted to be a partner in this endeavor and
we stand ready to assist and offer advice to the organizers
in their attempt to realize the greenest summer games
ever,” he added.
The signing of the agreement comes only a week after the
6th World Conference on Sport and the Environment, which
was co-hosted by UNEP and the International Olympic Committee
(IOC).
The Conference, under the theme of 'Sport, Peace and Environment'
brought together around 300 delegates, representing up
to 100 different countries who adopted a key resolution
on promoting sports and the environment into the 21st
century.
Eric Falt, Director of the UNEP Division of Communications
and Public Information which will be spearheading the
UN side of the Beijing agreement, said: “ Sport has the
power to bridge the divide between communities and countries
and in doing so help in our common quest for a more stable
and peaceful world”.
“Part of that stability rests on a healthy and durable
environment. So the commitments made by the organizing
committee for the 2008 summer games have resonance both
within and beyond the sporting world. Through well targeted
and well designed public awareness initiatives we hope
to take this message to the people of China and to the
peoples of the world,” he added.
The green plans for Beijing are part of a growing commitment
by Olympic organizers to put sport at the forefront of
environmental planning and awareness.
During last week’s conference in Nairobi organizers of
the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in Torino, who are working
closely with UNEP, unveiled their third Sustainability
Report.
Initiatives include the HEritage Climate TORino (HECTOR)
project designed to make the winter games carbon neutral
alongside eco-labeling for hotels and measures to reduce
the amounts of water needed to generate artificial snow.
Notes for editors:
The environment has been declared the third pillar of
Olympism by the International Olympic Committee (IOC),
alongside sport and culture. Recognising the importance
of sport in building a peaceful and better world and in
achieving the Millennium Development Goals, the United
Nations has declared 2005 as the International Year for
Sport and Physical Education to promote education, health,
development and peace.
UNEP has developed an active Sport and Environment Programme
to promote the links between sport and the environment.
In February 2003 the UNEP Governing Council adopted a
long-term strategy on sport and the environment, which
seeks to further reinforce UNEP’s work in this field.
The strategy also seeks to strengthen partnerships with
sports organizations and federations, and specifically
requests UNEP to initiate cooperation with Olympic host
cities.
UNEP has been working closely with the International Olympic
Committee and other sports bodies since 1994 as part of
its Sport and Environment Programme. In 2004, it implemented
a number of environmental awareness activities at the
Athens Olympics Games, in collaboration with the Athens
2004 Olympic Organizing Committee and other partners.
UNEP is represented on the IOC Sport and Environment Commission,
which meets regularly to review environmental issues as
they relate to the Olympic Games and to advise the IOC
Executive Board on environmental issues. |