The Japan Times - Paris Olympics promise climate action, experts remain sceptical

EUR -
AED 4.184329
AFN 71.779478
ALL 94.317362
AMD 418.797437
ANG 2.039926
AOA 1044.799931
ARS 1683.401049
AUD 1.65243
AWG 2.052285
AZN 1.940367
BAM 1.956731
BBD 2.298144
BDT 140.346781
BGN 1.926534
BHD 0.430205
BIF 3388.72322
BMD 1.139367
BND 1.476338
BOB 7.884683
BRL 5.892467
BSD 1.141073
BTN 107.09749
BWP 15.506787
BYN 3.309347
BYR 22331.595981
BZD 2.294842
CAD 1.616546
CDF 2583.52018
CHF 0.922202
CLF 0.026706
CLP 1051.054553
CNY 7.745589
CNH 7.746096
COP 3924.55012
CRC 518.046501
CUC 1.139367
CUP 30.193229
CVE 110.316523
CZK 24.252685
DJF 203.191142
DKK 7.474055
DOP 67.0419
DZD 151.95429
EGP 56.308777
ERN 17.090507
ETB 183.96007
FJD 2.560443
FKP 0.863477
GBP 0.86245
GEL 3.013646
GGP 0.863477
GHS 12.865122
GIP 0.863477
GMD 83.174013
GNF 9997.71331
GTQ 8.705104
GYD 238.793625
HKD 8.93547
HNL 30.530197
HRK 7.534406
HTG 149.121795
HUF 353.691449
IDR 20338.84285
ILS 3.417788
IMP 0.863477
INR 107.475648
IQD 1494.711224
IRR 1566914.661418
ISK 143.993205
JEP 0.863477
JMD 179.709454
JOD 0.807792
JPY 184.349039
KES 147.545308
KGS 99.638077
KHR 4579.897862
KMF 494.485645
KPW 1025.430826
KRW 1752.949874
KWD 0.35286
KYD 0.950848
KZT 553.620998
LAK 25044.807094
LBP 102180.362238
LKR 383.540816
LRD 207.837983
LSL 18.755842
LTL 3.364254
LVL 0.689192
LYD 7.324646
MAD 10.699297
MDL 20.230537
MGA 4826.423625
MKD 61.680319
MMK 2392.271819
MNT 4078.851706
MOP 9.217086
MRU 45.537668
MUR 53.823799
MVR 17.603538
MWK 1978.593566
MXN 19.92514
MYR 4.630417
MZN 72.810351
NAD 18.755842
NGN 1571.77945
NIO 41.989796
NOK 11.312782
NPR 171.356536
NZD 2.016207
OMR 0.438087
PAB 1.141033
PEN 3.890834
PGK 5.007339
PHP 69.739526
PKR 317.553662
PLN 4.285559
PYG 6964.466697
QAR 4.159143
RON 5.239385
RSD 117.350276
RUB 89.663082
RWF 1671.039125
SAR 4.285033
SBD 9.17413
SCR 16.025826
SDG 683.620592
SEK 11.078249
SGD 1.473817
SHP 0.850653
SLE 28.257426
SLL 23891.963457
SOS 652.124608
SRD 42.706899
STD 23582.599464
STN 24.511448
SVC 9.983707
SYP 125.93664
SZL 18.745413
THB 37.955164
TJS 10.560078
TMT 3.987785
TND 3.38188
TOP 2.743323
TRY 53.140772
TTD 7.754656
TWD 36.316762
TZS 2993.770345
UAH 51.217419
UGX 4187.992761
USD 1.139367
UYU 45.801593
UZS 13705.52146
VES 707.265554
VND 29951.113742
VUV 135.788958
WST 3.168447
XAF 656.286559
XAG 0.019402
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.079197
XCG 2.056378
XDR 0.81621
XOF 656.283678
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.881482
ZAR 18.737684
ZMK 10255.669674
ZMW 20.554231
ZWL 366.875755
  • RBGPF

    3.7000

    65

    +5.69%

  • CMSC

    -0.1160

    21.93

    -0.53%

  • RIO

    -1.3700

    93.74

    -1.46%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    83.01

    -0.49%

  • BCC

    1.2600

    81.02

    +1.56%

  • BCE

    -0.2800

    22.92

    -1.22%

  • GSK

    0.6100

    52.5

    +1.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.3900

    18.39

    +2.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1600

    21.77

    -0.73%

  • AZN

    2.7300

    188.41

    +1.45%

  • RELX

    0.4200

    31.34

    +1.34%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.79

    +1.64%

  • BP

    -0.5900

    37.13

    -1.59%

  • BTI

    0.2800

    62.76

    +0.45%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.89

    +0.22%

Paris Olympics promise climate action, experts remain sceptical
Paris Olympics promise climate action, experts remain sceptical / Photo: Stefano RELLANDINI - AFP

Paris Olympics promise climate action, experts remain sceptical

Organisers of the 2024 Paris Olympics promised to take "unprecedented" action for the climate by halving the carbon footprint of previous Games and financing projects to reduce planet-heating greenhouse gases.

Text size:

But experts remain sceptical, especially after organisers dropped a pledge to set a hard limit on its overall carbon cost.

About one-third of the heat-trapping emissions from the three-week spectacle is expected to come from transport, with millions of athletes, spectators, staff and journalists flying into Paris.

Organisers opted mostly for pre-existing or temporary infrastructure to host the event, avoiding the significant environmental cost from carbon-intensive building materials like concrete and steel.

But the Games' sustainability credentials took a hit when an initial commitment to set a definite ceiling on emissions at 1.58 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent was dumped.

"The quantified target, which was the big step forward compared to previous Games and was announced with great fanfare, has been abandoned," said Martin Muller from the Institute of Geography and Sustainability at Lausanne University.

"Without a quantified goal, there is no verifiable obligation."

Organisers instead promised that the Olympics would emit half the average emissions of the 2012 and 2016 Games in London and Rio de Janeiro -- an amount Muller said would be 3.9 million tonnes of CO2.

Paris 2024 could "emit 1.95 million tonnes and still say they have achieved their objective" despite "an increase of more than 20 percent compared to the initial target," he said.

- Climate contribution -

Organisers said the Games would make a "positive contribution to the climate" through the purchase of carbon credits, which offset pollution by funding projects that reduce or avoid greenhouse gas emissions.

This language was also criticised and amended, and organisers now say the Games will "support climate contribution projects that cut and capture CO2 at levels which match the Games' emissions that can't be avoided".

This could include projects which protect forests, plant trees or roll out renewable energy, organisers said, without providing further details.

"Framing their investments in credits as 'climate contribution' not offsets is a great way to stay honest about an organisation's own footprint while supporting and financing progress to global net zero goals," said Kaya Axelsson from the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment at the University of Oxford.

Benja Faecks from Carbon Market Watch, a nonprofit industry watchdog, also said that amended phrasing "doesn't mislead the public into believing that the Games have no impact on the climate".

"Carbon credits should be used to support projects that are worth financing, but never to 'compensate for emissions'," he said.

Carbon Market Watch previously found that the Games' climate strategy was "incomplete and falls short of achieving transparency", citing the lack of detailed methodologies and monitoring.

- 'Unjustified plastic pollution' -

Activists have voiced concern about the level of plastic waste during the Games, and the involvement of major corporate sponsor Coca-Cola.

Under pressure, organisers said an estimated 9.6 million drinks would be distributed from fountains or glass bottles, 6.2 million poured into reusable cups, and 2.2 million recycled plastic bottles given to athletes.

France Nature Environnement (FNE), a network of advocacy groups, accused Coca-Cola of "unjustified plastic pollution" and attacked plans to pour drinks from recycled plastic bottles into reusable plastic cups as "subterfuge".

"Recycling is not the solution: Coca-Cola should have reduced its plastic," Axele Gibert, of FNE, told AFP.

In 2023, Coca-Cola topped a ranking of brands responsible for the worst plastic pollution carried out by NGO Break Free From Plastic, based on an audit of waste collected by volunteers in 41 countries.

- Greener Games -

Researchers like Muller have proposed solutions to make the Olympics more sustainable.

"First, greatly reducing the size of the event; second, rotating the Olympics among the same cities; third, enforcing independent sustainability standards," he co-wrote in a study published in Nature Sustainability in 2021.

To limit air travel, NGO The Shifters proposed to "maximise in future the sale of tickets to local spectators and those coming from neighbouring countries, whose journeys are less emission intensive".

This could be coupled with "decentralised fan zones managed by the organising country and located in different continents to welcome spectators travelling shorter distances".

M.Yamazaki--JT