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The Sustainability Of The Cop15 Copenhagen Meeting
The COP15 Climate Change meeting in Copenhagen has become the highest profile environmental meeting to gain certification to BS 8901. In the words of BSI Director Mike Lowe: “It’s fantastic to see BS 8901 being implemented across high-profile events such as COP15. A large part of the standard is about addressing the environmental impact of an event so in this respect, it is highly appropriate that a conference on climate change is compliant. BSI continues to develop a wide programme of standards-based solutions, assisting organizations of all size and type to implement the strategy and processes necessary to help address climate change.” The UN organizers of COP15 realized the huge scale of the conference would come under question, particularly the estimated 30,000 attendees and their back up from more than one hundred countries around the world. While the organizers understandably prioritized security of the top-level delegates, and logistics, “environmentally friendly organization to the highest degree possible under the given conditions”, was stated as the fourth highest priority. The key issue of how to offset the carbon emissions arising from the travel of the thousands of delegates (an estimated 40,500 tones of CO2 equivalent) was resolved via a project in Bangladesh. This had some resonance with the conference theme of climate change - Bangladesh is one of the nations with the most to lose from the effects of global warming. The project involved replacing brick kilns with energy efficient ones. Project organizers claim it will save 100,000 tons of CO2 equivalent per year. The project is an agreement between the Danish Government, the World Bank and the Government of Bangladesh. The organizers also claim it will result in a noticeable reduction in air pollution in the Dhaka area. A budget of 0.7 million Euro was allocated to the carbon offset associated with the COP15 conference. The Danish government also has a portfolio of around 60 other climate reduction projects around the world. A much larger and complex event which is aiming for BS 8901 certification is the London Olympic Games in 2012. Preceding Games have all claimed to be “green Olympics”. The 2012 is the first to take advantage of a formalized certification to a standard backing up this claim. In February 2009, the London Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (LOCOG) published its sustainability guidelines for all opening and closing ceremonies and the games themselves. The guidelines are intended for the internal organizing groups and contractors responsible for delivering the London Olympics in 2012. The guidelines cover waste management, resource and energy use. They do not specifically mandate for the games to be carbon neutral, however. Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com Dylan Tanner is an eco-entrepreneur and writer who founded the newsletters Asia and China Environmental Reviews and has been writing about environmental and social trends within a business context for fifteen years. His latest venture is a B2B directory of BS8901 certified companies and other certified suppliers. |
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