Renner’s Race to Save the Environment
April 22, 2008

Canadian cross-country skier Sara Renner competing in the women’s 10-kilometre final at the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games. (Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)
“As a mother, as an athlete and a Canadian, I have a
huge responsibility to my daughter,” said Renner.
“At a time when it’s so crucial, everyone
has to do something for the environment. Everyone has to stand up
and say ‘my children are important and I will not be
remembered as someone who didn’t do
anything.’”
Throughout her 12-year international cross-country skiing
career, Renner has witnessed winter climate conditions grow
increasingly unpredictable and she sees the unseasonable weather as
a threat to the future of her sport.
“I am so used to racing on snow that has been
trucked in from hundreds and hundreds of kilometres, and that snow
they truck in is getting dirtier and dirtier every
year,” said Renner. “It’s just
so difficult for these organizers to pull off these [World Cup]
races in Europe.”
Al Gore’s climate change boot camp
This month in Montreal, Quebec, Renner attended a three-day
intensive training session about environmental science and
solutions to the climate change crisis. Talks were led by former
United States vice president Al Gore and climate experts, including
renowned Canadian scientist Dr.
David
Suzuki . Renner was among 250 athletes, business leaders,
educators, environmentalists and government officials from across
Canada who attended the sessions organized by
The Climate
Project (TCP) Canada . Participants returned home to their
communities as climate ambassadors armed with the most current
information necessary to increase public awareness of the growing
climate crisis.
Renner got her climate change summit invitation through the
Clean Air
Champions , a non-profit organization seeking to improve air
quality by working with respected athletes who motivate and educate
Canadians to adopt everyday practices to enhance environmental and
personal health. For Renner, attending the sessions was worth the
guilty feeling that comes from “burning the
carbon” to fly across the Canadian prairies. And to
lessen the guilt, she often buys carbon offsets, a voluntary tax on
carbon-producing emissions, for air travel. She admits that
it’s not ideal, but it’s one of the ways
she can lessen her impact.
Simplify and spend time with family
Adapting to an environmentally friendly lifestyle has great
benefits for Renner and her husband, Thomas Grandi, a Canadian
Olympian in alpine skiing and president of Alpine Alberta.
According to Renner, the easiest way for their family to reduce
their environmental footprint is to simplify the way they live.
Considering the environment doesn’t require drastic
change. It’s the everyday things like eating local
foods whenever possible, clothes-line drying her laundry, riding a
bike as much as possible, or offsetting her air travel or reducing
it when she can.
“All these things that we do, and all the things
that our culture has gotten suckered into, are taking away time
from what is important,” said Renner.
“It’s the same things that are taking time
away from working out, time away from our families. By making your
life simpler, you are reducing your environmental footprint, and in
the end you are making your life happier for it.”
Call to action

Thomas Grandi of Canada competing in the final of the men’s alpine skiing giant slalom at the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games. (Clive Mason/Getty Images)
Athletes are not immune to the potentially devastating realities
of climate change. Support for the environment has reached the
world of sport.
As Renner explained: “We are the generation that
this [climate change] is falling on our shoulders, and we have an
opportunity to rise and do something about the
environment.”




