Kick the Carbon Habit
June 5, 2008

Quatchi, Miga and Sumi cycle to work on VANOC commuter challenge day. (VANOC photo)
The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and
Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) commends this drive for changing
attitudes and promoting effective carbon use behaviour
— something VANOC and its partners will endeavour to
achieve while hosting the 2010 Winter Games. VANOC entered into a
partnership with
UNEP
in October 2007.
“At VANOC, we are proud of the fact that
we seize every opportunity to inspire action on local and global
environmental challenges,” said John Furlong, VANOC
Chief Executive Officer. “By collaborating with
organizations such as UNEP, the Vancouver 2010 Winter Games have
the potential to show the world what’s possible when
people come together on critical issues like climate
change.”
Commuter challenge tally. (VANOC photo)
As part of celebrating Environment Week in Canada, VANOC has
challenged its staff in Vancouver and Whistler to kick the carbon
habit with a low emission commuter challenge and motivational
sessions in efforts to meet VANOC’s carbon goal of
reducing as many emissions as possible in preparation for the
Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. Street rallies,
bicycles parades, green concerts, school essay and poster
competitions, tree planting, recycling and clean-up campaigns are
also happening in communities across the country this week.
VANOC hybrid fleet vehicle. (VANOC photo)
VANOC has been focused on reducingas many emissions as possible
in Games-based planning, construction and operations through energy
conservation and the use of fuel and energy sources that produce
low or no emissions. That entails taking responsibility for carbon
emissions related to the Games by implementing a carbon management
program based on four guiding principles:
KNOW our carbon footprint, measure and track it
REDUCE our carbon emissions at their source as much as
possible
OFFSET remaining emissions
INSPIRE and ENABLE others to take action on climate change
Here’s a list of five simple things that VANOC staff
is encouraged to do during the workday to help the 2010 Winter
Games reach its low emission goal:
1.
Reduce your paper use
Why: Saving paper saves emissions from energy use in
printing, production, transport and disposal.
How: Set your printers to default to double-sided printing,
print black and white instead of colour wherever possible, reuse
paper as much as possible.
2.
Reduce your energy use
Why: Using less energy results in fewer emissions.
How: Shut down your computer at night, turn out your desk
light when you leave for a meeting, take the stairs not the
elevator, and draw your window shades on sunny days to maximize the
efficiency of air conditioning.
3.
Reduce your waste
Why: There are emissions related to transport and energy in
the handling of waste.
How: Recycle and compost as much as possible, order/procure
materials with minimal packaging to avoid waste up-front, and use
reusable lunch containers and travel mugs.
4.
Think about your commuting and fleet options
Why: Emissions from travel make up the biggest piece of our
carbon footprint.
How: Minimize ground travel emissions by not idling, carpool
with colleagues when feasible, video conference whenever possible
to avoid travel and look for sustainable commuting options to and
from work.
5.
Green your meetings and events
Why: Teach others about your commitment to reducing your
carbon footprint.
How: Deliver e-meetings using whiteboards and projection
instead of paper, provide recycling options at the event, use
reusable dishes over disposable and buy local to supply events to
reduce emissions from transport.

Cycling to the office. (VANOC photo)
Over the coming year, VANOC will be working with partners such
as the Province of
British
Columbia’s Climate Action Secretariat to engage all
participants and spectators at the 2010 Winter Games in taking
action on climate change.




