The Greening of Sports to Save the Planet

Sports is a $1.3 trillion global industry, with over $450 billion of this spent in the US. And small wonder – sports figures and celebrities have the greatest influence on us, aside from family. Sporting events occur constantly and can reach every one of us. Sports engage us on a visceral level and have the power to forge lifelong allegiances, create rivalries, and symbolize a city or even a country. Think of Brazil with soccer, Canada with hockey, Norway with skiing, Kenya with running, and so forth.
Attending the Green Sports Alliance Summit in Chicago recently, I was able to participate in the launch of the Global Leadership Council. This new initiative will promote sustainable business practices, help the green sport network better penetrate the industry and help identify shortcomings in the process, The GSA started in 2007 when its now-president, Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, challenged the owners of Major League Baseball to set and meet sustainability goals. He upped the ante at this year's Summit, relying upon his 30 year career as an NRDC scientist, declaring, "The earth's projected temperature rise of 6 degrees in the next centuries will end human life." After a stunned silence, he stated the problem and proposed a lofty challenge: "The sustainable economy doesn't exist. We need to create it."

The compelling aspect to the GSA's approach is the coupling of leagues, teams and venues as members. From our experience, working with organizations (teams) and their cultures (management and fans) in addition to working on their venues (stadiums), our People-Process-Place approach, creates more customized, durable and effective efforts. Leagues and teams have an opportunity to lead, which given the naturally competitive nature of teams and athletes, is creating an entirely new competitive arena – environmental effectiveness related to energy saved, waste diverted, water saved, community events, and so forth.
Perhaps the next threshold of success in this long road will occur when Las Vegas has a line on the Energy Utilization Index and waste diversion rates of the nation's footballs stadiums and basketball arenas. Now that's something I would bet on.
The post The Greening of Sports to Save the Planet appeared first on evolveEA.