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GREEN GOAL 2010 THE GREENING OF THE 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP™ HOW CAN PETCO MEMBERS CONTRIBUTE? Cape Town 09 October 2009

GREEN GOAL 2010 THE GREENING OF THE 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP™ HOW CAN PETCO MEMBERS CONTRIBUTE? Cape Town 09 October 2009. Prepared by Sheryl Ozinsky. Today. 10h00: Arrival and Welcome 10h15: Update PETCO and PET Recycling 10h25: Q&A 10h30: Green Goal 2010

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GREEN GOAL 2010 THE GREENING OF THE 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP™ HOW CAN PETCO MEMBERS CONTRIBUTE? Cape Town 09 October 2009

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  1. GREEN GOAL 2010 THE GREENING OF THE 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP™HOW CAN PETCO MEMBERS CONTRIBUTE? Cape Town 09 October 2009 Prepared by Sheryl Ozinsky

  2. Today 10h00: Arrival and Welcome 10h15: Update PETCO and PET Recycling 10h25: Q&A 10h30: Green Goal 2010 12h00: Q&A and Group Brainstorm 12h30: Lunch and networking

  3. This Presentation Is South Africa taking greening seriously in hosting the 2010 FIFA World Cup™? What is Green Goal 2010? What are the principles and targets that the OC and Host Cities have set? What are the greening projects that the Host Cities are implementing? Two groups discuss how the packaging industry can be involved.

  4. Green Olympics Setting Standards “The International Olympic Committee is resolved to ensure that the environment becomes the third dimension of Olympicism, the first and second being sport and culture.“ Juan Antonio Samaranch, Ex-IOC-President

  5. 2006 FIFA World Cup™ • Organisers of the FIFA 2006 World Cup™ in Germany initiated the Green Goal programme to give effect to HCA requirements of environmental protection • FIFA / LOC adopted Green Goal Programme for FIFA 2010 World Cup™

  6. Event Greening • Event greening now an integral part of the hosting of major international events • No international framework as yet – event specific • UNEP: Sport and Environment Programme playing coordinating role; event greening manuals available

  7. FIFA 2010 World Cup™ Host City Agreement • Clause 6.7: Environmental Protection The Host City must carry out obligations in terms of HCA in a manner which : • embraces the concept of sustainable development • complies with applicable environmental legislation • promotes the protection of the environment

  8. What is Green Goal? • Green Goal is the environmental protection project of the FIFA World Cup™. • The 2006 FIFA World Cup™ in Germany was the first time that FIFA aimed to meet measurable environmental protection targets, established for waste, transportation, energy and water that significantly reduced the environmental impact of the event

  9. Greening Principles for 2010 • The overarching principle for the event • will be sustainability: • “By ensuring sustainable management of all resources used we will meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of the future generations to meet their own needs.”

  10. Greening Principles for 2010 • Principle 1: Sustainable Procurement • Principle 2: Sustainable Construction • Principle 3: Waste Management (Avoidance, Reduction, Re-use/ Recycling) • Principle 4: Water Management • Principle 5: Energy Efficiency • Principle 6: Sustainable Transport • Principle 7: Air Quality Management • Principle 8: Biodiversity Conservation • Principle 9: Social Development • Principle 10: Sustainable Tourism • Principle 11: Participation, Communication, Education/Public Awareness • Principle 12: Monitoring and Evaluation • Principle 13: Leaving a Positive ‘Greening’ Legacy

  11. Event Footprint Host City Cape Town • Green Point Stadium • Official Fan Fest: Grand Parade • Fan Walk • 4 Public Viewing Areas • Athlone, Bellville, Swartklip, Khayelitsha • 2 Venue Specific Training Sites • 2 Team Hotels • 1 FIFA Hotel • Base camps • Final Draw – 4 December 2009

  12. Environmental Legacy: Green Goal • Mitigate negative environmental impacts • Mainstream sustainability considerations in preparations for 2010 • Position South Africa as responsible hosts of the 2010 FIFA World Cup™ • Leave a positive environmental legacy • Investment in infrastructure for long term resource efficiency • Greater awareness of environmental issues • Behavior change

  13. Host City Cape Town • Environmental Business Plan completed in 2006 • Partnership with Konrad Adenauer Stiftung to host the Green Goal Workshop Series • 8 workshops, 2 discussion forums resulted in HC CT Green Goal Action Plan launched October 2009

  14. Green Goal 2010: Host City Cape Town 41 projects across 9 themes in the following areas: • Energy and climate change • Water • Integrated waste management • Transport , mobility and access • Landscaping and biodiversity • Green buildings and sustainable lifestyles • Responsible tourism • Communication and awareness • Monitoring and evaluation

  15. Energy and Climate Change • Green Point Stadium • Installation of energy efficient technologies Green Point Stadium • Passive lighting / heating design • Low energy light fittings • Building Management System • Philippi Stadium • Energy efficient flood lighting • Energy sub-metering • Cape Town Station • Energy efficient light fittings • Energy efficient AC • BMS

  16. The Climate Impact of the 2006 FIFA World Cup™ 100,000 tons of carbon dioxide, aimed to be carbon neutral

  17. Energy and Climate Change • Carbon offset or mitigation? • Host City Cape Town footprint estimated at 180 000 tonnes of CO2 equivalents • Very expensive to offset (between $6 and $12 per tonne) • Hosting “low carbon games” with focus on mitigation • Host City Durban “carbon neutral games”, offsetting all carbon emitted • Monitoring and reporting using integrated event monitoring tool • Communication of footprint and measures to reduce it

  18. Low Carbon or Carbon Neutral Compensation Reducing the Greenhouse Gas Emissions Renewable Energy Energy Efficiency 2010 FIFA World CupTM

  19. Carbon Footprint Host City Cape Town

  20. Carbon mitigation legacy projects Host City Cape Town • R7million grant from DANIDA received • Projects have been selected and business plans approved • Installation of energy efficient technologies • Communication and awareness

  21. Changing the future of eventing and leaving a climate change legacy

  22. 12 Projects • Dedicated Programme Co-ordinator • Total Budget: R25.6 million • R 16.1 million eThekwini Municipality • R 9.5 million DANIDA • Other contributions from: • Comrades Marathon Assoc & Bonitas Medical Fund • Scouts South Africa & UNEP

  23. Durban – target set to host a climate neutral 2010 FIFA World Cup™ • Includes event & Moses Mabhida Stadium • Carbon Footprint - 307,000t CO2 • Carbon Emissions Reduction Projects Development

  24. Five projects selected, 3 can be implemented in short term – approx R170 million :

  25. Carbon Sequestration • Buffelsdraai Landfill Site Community Reforestation Project - 82,000 trees being planted in Phase 1 - Conservatively estimated to sink > 12,000 tonnes CO2 over 20 years - Funded by DANIDA, Comrades/Bonitas, Scouts SA - Maintenance funded by eThekwini Muncipality - More than 300 Community Treepreneurs created - 9 Permanent Jobs created • Rollout to remaining 500 Ha of landfill buffer approved in principle (R30 mill investment) • Next project at Inanda Mountain being initiated

  26. Project 5 Green Review directed the expenditure of R4,230,000 on additional energy & water Efficiency measures at 3 Training Stadia

  27. Green Guidelines Series – LEGACY PROJECT - Water Use Efficiency Guideline - Energy Efficiency Guideline - Sustainable Waste Management Guideline - Green Landscaping Guideline • All in final draft stage, due for launch in November 09.

  28. • Sustainable Waste Management Strategy - Event Venues - Inputs to greater Durban Waste Management Plan for 2010 event period • Due for completion October 2009

  29. Nelson Mandela Bay Renewable Energy - Solar Water Heating - 1000 units installed in low income houses - Provision of creches in Motherwell - Expected large scale roll-out of the sale of systems to private homes to start this year (100 000 over 5 years => 60 MW) Project run by CEF Sustainability

  30. Solid waste to energy (landfill gas) (Koedoeskloof and Arlington Waste Disposal Sites) EIA in progress Nelson Mandela Bay

  31. WaterMinimise the use of potable water and promote the conservation of water resources • Green Point Stadium water efficient technologies • Rainwater harvesting off the roof • Water saving taps • Dual flush toilets in VIP areas • Flush urinals • Spring water for irrigation of Green Point Common • Replacing 580 000 k/l p.a. potable water for irrigation • Detail design underway

  32. Integrated Waste Management • Operational waste minimisation - Waste avoidance • No hand-outs at gates • Avoid unnecessary packaging • Reusable packaging and materials (e.g. plastic crates vs cardboard) • Large condiment dispensers vs single servings - Waste minimisation • Minimise packaging e.g. wrapping of vuvu’s and T- shirts • Cup concept – commemorative cup

  33. Integrated Waste Management • Waste recycling • 20% waste diversion target (LOC policy) • 2 or 4 bin system at Stadium, Fan Fest and PVA’s • 2 new mini-multi-use recycling facilities under • construction in HC CT • Labeling and signage • Monitoring using integrated event monitoring tool • Integrated communication

  34. Confederations Cup Observations Waste separation at source at 3 of the 4 stadia Coca Coca has recognised need to recycle PET bottles Bins were allocated outside and inside the stadium and were clearly marked for dry waste and wet waste separation Volunteers were responsible for checking the bins Providing oversight on separation of wasteWatching bins to emptied at intervals The spectator area was clean with only little waste lying around Most bins had plastic bin-liners

  35. Bins for five different waste streams created confusion amongst spectators • At the gates clearly marked bins were placed for waste separation. • However, officials did not seem to be separating waste • Beer was served in corn starch plastic cups which were carelessly thrown • on the floor when they were empty. • Mass generation of waste from PET and glass beer bottles • Bins did not have plastic liners. The waste collectors had to • remove waste from bins into plastic bags and thereafter load on to truck  Confederations Cup Observations

  36. LOC cleansing contractor did not adhere to waste separation • arrangements in all cases • Some bins had no stickers and in some stadia stickers were photocopies • stuck on the bins with sticky tape • Some bins were not in the right position => no map for the stadium? • Condiment containers were too small, they used normal tomato ketchup • containers and not the big ones • Cardboards were thrown everywhere=>solution: bigger containers for • cardboards and boxes • Many Park-and Ride areas had no waste bins at all Confederations Cup Observations

  37. Observations Confederations Cup

  38. Observations Confederations Cup

  39. Observations Confederations Cup

  40. Observations Confederations Cup

  41. Observations Confederations Cup

  42. Cup Concept • Cup Concept refers to a reusable / recyclable commemorative beverage cup that can be sold on a deposit system • Germany 2006 • Polypropylene cups were sold on deposit system at 1€ • Returned cups were washed and reused • FIFA appointed a service provider – Cup Concept • More than 80% of Coke branded cups were taken home • South Africa 2010 • No service provider appointed by FIFA • Host cities can develop own cup concept for Fan Fest • Prelim research shows that cup concept can work with recyclable PP cup – i.e. returned cups are recycled – no waste to landfill. • Cup graphics very important to improve commemorative value (in-mode labeling or screen printing)

  43. Integrated Waste Management Newlands Stadium baseline

  44. Green Goal branding of recycling bins and waste • minimization signage • Purchase of recycling bins • Establishment of Recycling/Drop off Centres • Kwamagxaki Recycling Centre and Motherwell Buy • Back Centre • Blue Horizon Bay Community Recycling Project Nelson Mandela Bay

  45. Transport, mobility and access • Promote public transport - 50% fans to the stadium by public transport - New infrastructure – IRT and Rail, Gautrain • Promotion through park and ride, additional services, additional safety and security • Promote NMT - New infrastructure - Park and walk - Fan Walk

  46. Transport, mobility and access Host City Cape Town • CBD bicycle services - Scoping as part of IRT underway • Eco-taxis - Engagement with CoCT and PGWC roleplayers - SAPIA offer to sponsor eco-driving training module for professional driving permit training - CoCT / PGWC promote eco-driving

  47. Landscaping and biodiversity • City beautification • Tree planting • Landscaping • Focused maintenance programme • Roads • Verges and medians • Street lights • Traffic lights • Signage • Etc.

  48. Landscaping and Biodiversity Green Point Common is being transformed into an urban park for the benefit of all residents Investment in tree planting and landscaping, regeneration of open space

  49. Landscaping and Biodiversity • Biodiversity showcase garden - Included in Green Point Park design - Specialist consultant appointment • Indigenous gardening training programme • Mouille Point student landscape design competition

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