💾 Archived View for siiky.srht.site › wiki › p.theconversation.paris_olympics_sustainability_gold_me… captured on 2024-08-18 at 18:05:44. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-09-08)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

The Conversation, Jannsen Santana, "Paris Olympics: with 365 days to go, will this mega-event clinch a sustainability gold medal?"

siiky

2023/08/24

2023/08/24

2023/08/24

post,environment,society

https://theconversation.com/paris-olympics-with-365-days-to-go-will-this-mega-event-clinch-a-sustainability-gold-medal-210314

A telling example is the Qatar 2022 World Cup. Host cities and organisations typically look to draw attention on the intended positive outcomes, including economic benefits and fan satisfaction. However, the Qatar event was dogged by a wide range of environmental and social controversies. These included the construction of gigantic stadiums in the middle of the desert, the abusive and often deadly working conditions for those constructing the facilities, the air conditioning needed to cool the audience in the country’s extreme temperatures, and the hundreds of international flights taken by more than a million spectators to travel to Qatar.

World Cup 2022: In the end, Qatar wins

Qatar World Cup lays bare the huge environmental cost of tournament

Even without the Olympics, Paris holds the title of the most-visited city in the world, bringing with it many sustainability-related challenges. Congested boulevards, air and noise pollution, and waste generation are definitely part of what is know as the “Paris syndrome” faced by many first-time visitors. These issues reveal that the vast number of visitors that the city already receives – more than 50 million tourists in 2019 – is unsustainable.

Exploring sustainable Paris

Paris Syndrome: A First-Class Problem for a First-Class Vacation

Number of tourist arrivals to Paris and the ĂŽle-de-France region in France from 2019 to 2022, by type