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A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games (Read 191 times)
whiteknight
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A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Jan 8th, 2023 at 10:07am
 
The challenge of delivering a 'climate-positive' 2032 Brisbane Olympic and Paralympic Games   Smiley
ABC News
Dec 8 2023

Delivering a "climate-positive" Olympics and Paralympic Games in Brisbane 2032 will require "radical thinking" that puts the needs of the planet above the wants of humans, experts say.

Key points:
The International Olympic Committee has committed to making all Olympic Games climate positive from 2030 onwards
Brisbane is contractually obliged to deliver the world's first climate-positive Games
Expert says delivering it will require "radical thinking" that moves away from old economic systems
Planning is well underway to ensure Brisbane meets its contractual commitment to deliver the first "climate-positive" Games, but Queensland academic Professor Marcus Foth believes achieving the goal in less than 10 years will require sacrifice.

"It's going to be a challenge," he said.

Professor Foth, from the Urban Informatics unit at QUT, said Brisbane has a golden opportunity to present a new "planet-centred" society.

"We cannot just assume that human needs … are the primal kind of consideration," he said.

"We've actually got to put ourselves into the mix of an ecological perspective where we are a part of an ecosystem.

"Obviously what we don't want is to go back into the stone ages … so we have got to find this middle ground where we recognise that there is a limit to growth."


The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has committed to make its organisation "climate positive" from 2024, and all Olympic Games climate positive from 2030 onwards.   Smiley

What delivering a 'climate-positive' Games mean?
Crowds of people walking at Brisbane's South Bank on a sunny afternoon.
Brisbane is contractually obliged to deliver the world's first climate-positive Games.
Professor Foth said it will require a departure from thinking around old economic systems.

"There is a lot of rhetoric in the documents, in the way that politicians talk about it, where the old business as usual slips in — which is about growth, it's about making money," he said.

"Well those are all very nice things to aspire towards, but they are all qualities of the old economic system," he said.

"Climate positive is very different — any kind of action that we as humans do needs to be making a positive contribution to the environment."

Professor Foth provided an example of a residential building where the occupants create more energy and water than they consume.

To achieve climate positivity, Professor Foth said there needs to be an entirely new approach to the economy and society, which prioritises the planet and life itself. 


Brisbane Olympics president Andrew Liveris says he wants the 2032 Brisbane Games to leave a legacy.
Andrew Liveris, president of 2032 Olympics and Paralympics, also wants to see lasting change.

"Our region can elevate through demonstration, what life on the planet should look like — through sporting events," Mr Liveris said.

"I am not doing this job because of a passing fancy and interest in sports.

"I'm doing this because I think we can truly elevate humanity through the Olympics by showing Brisbane 2032 is the best ever … not just the best Games ever, but the best legacy ever."

What will the new approach involve?
A young boy throws something into a yellow city recycling bin.
Experts say a climate-positive Olympic Games goes well beyond sustainable measures such as recycling.
Mr Liveris said the Brisbane Olympic Organising Committee (OCOG) will form a sustainability committee early this year, to start turning ideas into plans and actions.   Smiley

"We have to think about blueprint — not footprint and handprint … we have to have a planet-friendly orientation to all of our activities, and the Olympics are taking the lead there with the IOC, fundamentally, setting out a sustainability framework that says net positive for Brisbane," he said.

"There are a swathe of technologies and programs and tools that will have to be deployed to make that happen."

Looking up at a high rise city building with blue reflective windows, with trees and clouds.
The Games will use pre-existing venues.
Among considerations for the sustainability committee will be the effects of transportation, the process of carbon capture and storage and the implementation of closed-loop water systems.

"Innovation ecosystem is also something I'm definitely talking to the Queensland government about," Mr Liveris said.

"How we can actually attract investment in the innovation ecosystem, whether it be in recycling drones for transport, lightweight nanomaterials to make light aircraft … whether we can do recycling for making furniture from old clothing."

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whiteknight
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Re: A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Reply #1 - Jan 8th, 2023 at 10:11am
 
He also stressed that many of the Games venues already exist and those that are being built or upgraded will be used by the community post 2032.

"Fixed assets speaks to building certification and our commitments in the bid document to make sure that we absolutely totally have the certifications on sustainability for our venues," he said.

Sacrifice necessary for 'planet-centric' approach
Of the 32 venues across Brisbane, the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast, 84 per cent are existing or would be refurbished or temporary.

There are less than two years until the Paris 2024 Olympics and Paralympics.

Organisers there have committed to "more than halving the emissions arising in relation to the Games" and "offsetting even more CO2 emissions than are generated".

They said this will make the Paris Games "the first major sporting event to positively impact the climate".

Professor Foth said current sustainability approaches focus on reducing harm or minimising environmental impact in the ways we currently do business — for instance, providing recyclable packaging on products.

But he said "harm-minimising" strategies are human-centric and do nothing to stop rampant consumerism.

"It is uncomfortable. It is the kind of sacrifice and compromise that we've got to face, but I think the prospect of what we have to lose, eventually will be much greater."




Mr Liveris said the Olympics had a role to play in adopting a more "planet-centric" approach, but they cannot force change in countries around the world.

"This is the issue of our times," Mr Liveris said.

"Those are very big topics. I mean, how do you get the world to adjust to its habits — culturally?

"We at the Olympics, we'll have our role, but honestly, we can't solve it all. We will solve our piece and … hopefully, we'll set a standard that others can follow."
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Jasin
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Re: A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Reply #2 - Jan 8th, 2023 at 3:34pm
 
Do we really want a Corrupt Olympic Games here?
Do we really want highly infectious foreigners here?
Do we really want to waste Tax-Payer's money propping up an expensive Show of Professional athletes cashing in on what was set-up as a Organised Event for Amateur Sport?

We have a lot of American sports in the Olympics now, don't see much of Australian sports - maybe we should just toss it sideways and back to the USA to pay for?

Commonwealth Games = yes
Olympic 'americanised' Smuck = no
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Frank
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Re: A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Reply #3 - Jan 8th, 2023 at 4:17pm
 
'climate positive"   Cheesy Cheesy: Grin Grin


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Re: A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Reply #4 - Jan 8th, 2023 at 4:37pm
 
Jasin wrote on Jan 8th, 2023 at 3:34pm:
Do we really want a Corrupt Olympic Games here?
Do we really want highly infectious foreigners here?
Do we really want to waste Tax-Payer's money propping up an expensive Show of Professional athletes cashing in on what was set-up as a Organised Event for Amateur Sport?


We might as well see Australia host one of the last Olympic Games planned. I doubt that the Olympics will exist beyond the year 2040.

If you are really worried about infectious foreigners, you might be more concerned about the migrants that come here every year. Or the tourists that go overseas and then come back with some kind of illness.
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Frank
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Re: A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Reply #5 - Jan 8th, 2023 at 7:23pm
 
Despite gloomy headlines, our planet is getting cleaner and healthier


The media sells bad news, but scientific evidence shows that we are making progress toward a greener planet.

Pollution is plummeting
“Between 1970 and 2020,” according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), “the combined emissions of the six common pollutants (PM2.5 and PM10, SO2, NOx, VOCs, CO, and Pb) dropped by 78 percent.” Similar trends have been observed in other developed nations as well. Between 1970 and 2016, the UK reduced its emissions of all air pollutants except ammonia by 60%. The trend is unmistakable to anyone looking carefully at the evidence. Drs. Hannah Ritchie and Max Roser helpfully summed up the situation for Our World in Data in 2019:

“What becomes clear is that far from being the most polluted in recent history, the air in many rich countries today is cleaner than it has been for decades.”

More food on less land
One of the best ways to bring a nation out of grinding poverty is to boost its agricultural productivity. The introduction of high-yielding crop varieties during the Green Revolution, led by plant pathologist Norman Borlaug, nicely illustrated how this phenomenon works. According to a July 2021 study, enhanced crops developed between 1965 and 2010 increased food production by more than 40%, saving the world a whopping $83 trillion. Addressing the environmental impact of agriculture, the authors didn’t mince words:
“Our paper also sheds light on a concern, often expressed in the literature, that agricultural productivity improvements would pull additional land into agriculture at the expense of forests and other environmentally valuable land uses. We find evidence to the contrary… the Green Revolution tended to reduce the amount of land devoted to agriculture.”

Here’s just one way we know this conclusion is correct. Since 1961, farmland has only expanded by 7% while the global population has boomed — increasing by nearly 150%.

What about climate change?
Of course, climate change is the elephant in the room. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have increased in recent decades, which has led the WHO and others to warn about the looming public health impacts of heat waves, wildfires, and other natural disasters caused by global warming. Even here, though, the disaster projections that so often make headlines are out of step with the evidence.

For one thing, improved infrastructure (such as widespread air conditioning) has helped prevent a lot of weather-related mortality. Deaths due to natural disasters more broadly have also plummeted: A century ago, natural disasters commonly killed more than a million people annually. Today, that figure hovers somewhere between 10,000 and 20,000 deaths per year.

Recent research has shown that fossil fuels have generated far fewer GHG emissions than projected by commonly used climate models, a divergence that “is going to only get larger in coming decades,” climate researcher Roger Pielke, Jr. explained in November 2020. This means that the worst-case climate scenario grows “increasingly implausible with every passing year,” climatologists Zeke Hausfather and Glen Peters argued that same year in the journal Nature.
https://bigthink.com/the-present/planet-healthier-cleaner/

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Re: A Climate-Positive Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games
Reply #6 - Jan 8th, 2023 at 10:53pm
 

We should never have bid for the 2032 Olympics.  The bid itself, and the
hosting of the games is an unnecessarily exorbitant cost to the Aussie
taxpayer.

Official documents showing Queensland’s original $4.45 billion price tag
to host the 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games has already shot up more
than $1.35 billion and is likely to climb further.

A report published by academics at Oxford University’s Saďd Business School
titled Why the Olympics Blow Up, found every Games since 1960 had
ended up 172% on average over budget.

This could price the 2032 games at an astounding $7.65 billion.

Considering that the games are now nothing more than a combined media
circus, political grandstanding, and corporate money-making exercise, does
the average Aussie even want them here?  Why was there—at the least—no
plebiscite before the bid was even made? 

At least in my case, I'll be told old to be bothered giving a flying f*ck in 2032.    Grin




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