Showing posts with label sustainable sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sustainable sports. Show all posts

Game to Make Super Bowl 50 a Net Positive Event

This year there is a campaign to make this the most healthy, sustainable, shared, and socially responsible Super Bowl ever. An initiative called "Play Your Part" is trying to make Super Bowl 50 a net positive event. Play Your Part arises organically from the fact that Super Bowl 50 is being played in San Francisco Bay, an area well known for its leadership in innovation, sustainability, and technology.

The event is the brainchild of the 50 Fund and the 50 Host Committee. It is designed to help people make more sustainable choices in their lives now and in the future and to leave Bay Area communities better than they were before.

As they explain on their website, "We’re not just hosting the Super Bowl. We’re redefining it." Being Net Positive is about using Super Bowl 50 as a platform to do good – socially, environmentally and economically – for the benefit of the entire Bay Area.

The event is premised on four main goals:

To deliver a low-emissions event (power/ transportation)
To responsibly use materials and resources (food/water/waste)
To leave a positive and lasting legacy for the region
And, last but not least, to inspire fans to join us in making all of this a reality

The Play Your Part’ campaign hopes to inspire Bay Area sports fans and residents to do the right thing and join in embracing sustainable practices. In support of this goal the organizers will showcase innovative solutions that lessen our collective impact and by inspiring people to share stories of the simple, everyday things we can do each day to make a difference. The game designed to raise awareness and minimize impacts.

Environment

Levi's Stadium - The first LEED gold-certified professional football stadium.
Moscone Center – The 700,000 square foot convention center, home of The NFL Experience, and a hallmark of San Francisco tourism, is also a LEED gold-certified building.
Carbon Offsets – While our first goal is to reduce and avoid emissions, Host Committee sustainability partners TerraPass are helping to offset the emissions that are unavoidable. TerraPass is also working with the NFL, Host Committee Partners and Fans to do the same.
NFL's Urban Forestry Grants – This program provides much needed support for the planting of trees in Bay Area communities through grants to local Bay Area organizations.

Transportation

Public Transportation – As part of Super Bowl 50’s overall transportation plan, the Host Committee is working with regional agencies to ensure there are increased service levels for all public transit during Super Bowl week (January 30 – February 8). This will include additional service for Golden Gate Ferry, BART, WETA, and Muni. The Host Committee is also working with VTA and Caltrain to create a joint fare that encourages public transit along the Peninsula on game day.

Public Awareness – The Host Committee will work with media partners to promote the use of public transit and to discourage the use of cars. For Super Bowl Sunday, the Host Committee has created a special ‘SB 50’ pass with VTA to ensure that public transit provides the best option to get and from Levi’s Stadium. In addition, over 35,000 branded Clipper cards will help promote the use of public transit through a partnership with the MTC. Volunteer Transportation – The Host Committee will distribute branded Clipper Cards to all 5,000 SB50 volunteers to encourage them to take public transportation to and from their shifts.

Bike Valet – The Host Committee has partnered with the San Francisco Bike Coalition to establish a Bike Valet station at Super Bowl City for all 9 days, thanks to funding from the BAAQMD.

Fan Express – The Host Committee will make available a ‘Fan Express’ charter bus system for transportation to Levi’s Stadium on Super Bowl Sunday, with pick-up points spread throughout the Bay Area. Media Shuttles – The Host Committee is working with BYD to incorporate a small fleet of fully-electric buses into the NFL's media shuttle operation around downtown San Francisco.

Energy

PG&E, our official Clean Energy Partner, have made it possible for the Host Committee to run Super Bowl City on clean renewable power.

All generators used in Super Bowl City will run on Neste NEXBTL renewable diesel which to reduce emissions and improve air quality. Generators meeting EPA’s Tier 4 standards will be used in Super Bowl City to reduce emissions and noise, while Hydrogen Fuel Cell generators will be used to supplement renewable diesel generators and showcase this new technology of the future.

And we’ll be relying on the human energy provided by our 5,000 Volunteers and 100 Net Positive Champions that will be engaging with fans and helping them to have a net positive experience at Super Bowl 50.

Community

25% of corporate sponsorship monies raised for Super Bowl 50 go towards creating a positive legacy by improving Bay Area communities.

The 50 Fund, with support from Host Committee Partners, the NFL, and Friends of 50 Fund, is leading the charge to make this the most giving Super Bowl ever by supporting Bay Area organizations that help young people overcome the opportunity gaps that many face. 50 Fund programs include the Game Changer and Playmaker Grants programs, as well as legacy initiatives The RE(A)D ZONE and Play 60, Play On. For details, go to 50fund.org. The NFL's Super Kids, Super Sharing initiative sees schools from across the Bay Area teaming up with the NFL, Oakland Raiders, San Francisco 49ers, Verizon, and the Host Committee to put books, sports equipment, and school supplies into the hands of our children, and children in need.

The YES Youth Conference, hosted by BAAQMD, will feature a Super Bowl 50 theme. The conference will be attended by over 300 youth leaders from Bay Area schools with the goal of inspiring them to embrace sustainable futures, and share these messages with their fellow learners.

The Super Bowl 50 Host Committee has collaborated with Bay.org to establish Go Places, an innovative booking system and funding platform for school field trips. Go Places’ “Ready, Set, GoPlaces” awareness initiative will provide 50 free field trip buses for underserved Bay Area classes. Through the generous support of our funders and in collaboration with our field trip and transportation partners, 1,500 students will be getting out of the classroom to experience the amazing nature and science the Bay Area has to offer including Super Bowl City.

Food

The Host Committee’s master food concessionaire Legends will be serving locally sourced and organic food options in Super Bowl City.

A strong, active food recovery program will ensure that various food banks around the Bay Area benefit from receiving food for the needy that would otherwise go to waste.

Water

As part of the #BringYourOwn campaign, fans are encouraged to bring their own reusable water bottles and will be able to rehydrate using free water stations located throughout Super Bowl City. All 5,000 volunteers and 5,000 media personnel will be using reusable BPA free stainless steel bottles provided by official sustainability partner Klean Kanteen.

Water used to irrigate the pitch at Levi's Stadium is 100% recycled.

Waste

There will be no single-use bottles at Super Bowl City. Together with official sustainability partner Klean Kanteen, we’ll be inspiring a new conversation with fans around the elimination of single-use waste in the environment through their #BringYourOwn campaign.

A robust waste management plan is being implemented to ensure the greatest diversion of waste from landfill. Attention is also being paid to what materials are brought onsite at Super Bowl City to reduce what enters the waste stream. One example is the compostable serviceware that concessionaire Legends will use to serve all food and beverages.

A materials recovery program is being conducted by the NFL and Host Committee with various local community partners. This will lead to event related materials being collected post-event and upcycled to multiple uses. The Super Bowl City Production Charter will guide those brands activating in Super Bowl City, and their production companies, to embrace sustainable design practices. The Production Awards, to be announced on Sunday, January 31st 2016, will recognize those companies that best embrace these guidelines.

Choose Your Cause and Create a Net-Positive Legacy for the Bay Area

The 50 Fund selected four deserving Bay Area environmental non-profits to receive grants from the $1 million Sustainable Environments Grant Program. Once you submit your pledge, you receive 50 GoodCoins to give to the cause that matters to you most. You will be able to select from one of the four featured causes below. Through our collective action we’ll direct $200,000 from the Sustainable Environments Game Changer Program to causes that make a real and lasting impact on young people in the Bay Area. Thanks to the 50 Fund for supporting innovative approaches that create lasting solutions for local challenges. Causes

Education Outside

By using green schoolyards as innovative outdoor learning laboratories and connecting students with nature and healthy food as a regular part of their school day, Education Outside is creating resilient students that have the critical thinking skills and inspiration needed to achieve high-quality careers in the sciences, life-long health, and an environmentally sustainable future.

Environmental Volunteers

To provide affordable, easy-to-schedule, efficient and safe transportation for low-income youth (K-12) in the San Francisco Bay Area that facilitates access to science and environmental education field trips. The Game Changer grant will expand the Transportation Fund’s reach with an additional 340 buses sending over 13,000 more students on field trips.

Children’s Discovery Museum Of San Jose

To address the lack of connection to the natural world in nearby densely urban neighborhoods by building an outdoor play space that is a bridge to nature, combining interactive experiences in a natural setting with conservation, demonstration and educational programs that respond to the learning needs of diverse families.

Hunters Point Family

Hunters Point Family’s Healthy Bayview program will be scaled to increase the capacity of Hunters Point Family’s extensive community gardens and food education programs and also support the development of a state-of-the art aquaponics social enterprise that will increase healthy food production (produce and protein) and distribution to over 1,000 Bayview Hunters Point families each year.

For more information click here.

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Solar Energy and other NFL Sustainability Initiatives

The NFL leads all professional sports in its adoption of solar energy. The two teams that competed in Super Bowl XLIX are no exception. Both the Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots employ solar power at their home stadiums. This has prompting some to call the 2015 match-up, the "Solar Super Bowl."

The Seahawks Century Link Field and the Patriots Gillette Stadium rank fifth and sixth respectively among all sports franchises in installed solar capacity. Together these two stadiums have a solar capacity of 1,800 kilowatts (kW).

"Since the construction of Gillette Stadium, we have focused on long-term sustainability and energy efficiency as we try to not only be good corporate citizens, but leave behind a healthy environment for our children and grandchildren," said Jim Nolan, New England Patriots senior vice president of operations, finance and administration. "We are proud of our renewable energy efforts and happy to see so many other sports franchises taking similar steps to collectively reduce our environmental impact."

Century Link Field gets almost one third of its electricity from solar. The increasing reliance on solar energy is not unique to the teams that competed in this year's Super Bowl. One third of all American football stadiums have solar panels. The leading NFL stadiums belong to the Washington Redskins which ranks second in the league with 2,000 (kW) of installed capacity. By far the leading team is the Philadelphia Eagles with a total of 3,000 (kW).

"Our commitment to sustainability began in 2003 with the opening of Lincoln Financial Field," said Eagles President Don Smolenski. "What started with a blue bin under each employee’s desk has grown into our company-wide Go Green initiative that encompasses energy efficiency, recycling, composting, green purchasing, reforestation and more. Through our partnership with NRG, we are now able to produce clean energy on site after installing more than 11,000 solar panels and 14 wind turbines. We are fortunate to have a platform that allows us to lead by example and reduce our environmental impact and we are supportive of all the other venues and organizations doing the same."

In addition to generating good PR, solar is also good business. Like other sports organizations, football teams are turning to solar because it is both cost effective and environmentally responsible.

"The San Francisco Giants recognize that innovation and sustainability go hand-in-hand from our solar initiatives to our recycling and water conservation programs. Sustainability is one of the ways that we can be innovative as a business," said Alfonso Felder, Giants Senior Vice President of Administration.

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LEDs Light Up Super Bowl XLIX

LEDs were in the spotlight at the 2015 Super Bowl. The first Super Bowl to be illuminated by LEDs yielded a lighting energy savings of 75 percent over traditional lighting. LEDs have overcome some of the early hurdles and they now offer excellent lighting quality while consuming only 25 percent of the energy of traditional lighting. The cooler-burning LEDs also cut air-conditioning costs by 30 percent.

The new lighting at the University of Phoenix stadium was provided by 44,928 Cree XLamp MK-R LEDs, and installed by Ephesus Lighting.

LEDs offer a number of benefits including efficiency and quality. LEDs are far more powerful than traditional stadium lighting. The new lighting at the University of Phoenix Stadium uses 480 fewer fixtures than the previous system (300 LED fixtures replaced 780 metal halide fixtures). Even more dramatically the new LED lighting system uses 930,000 less watts of power than the previous system (310,000 watts for LEDs vs 1.24 million watts for metal halide bulbs).

In addition to substantially lower power requirements, the lighting quality of LED lighting is also superior to metal halide. LEDs make everything look better by producing nearly double the illumination of the old metal halide bulbs. The LEDs are also more life-like and they provide more uniform lighting. This reduces shadows which helps to improve visibility for both players on the field and viewers.

The high profile of the Super Bowl is a great way to disseminate the value and quality of LEDs.  As explained by Michael Watson, Cree’s vice president of product strategy: “The Super Bowl and stadium lighting is sort of like the holy grail from an LED perspective.”  

Super Bowl XLIX may have been the first to be illuminated by LEDs but it is not the last. A value equation that combines quality and efficiency mean that LEDs are destined to dominate the future of lighting.

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Sustainability a Winner at Super Bowl XLIX

The 2015 Super Bowl provided a powerful platform that showcased sustainability. The game at the University of Phoenix stadium was lit by LEDs and powered by both wind and solar energy. Carbon emissions were offset by renewable energy credits and recycling efforts permeated the entire event. This included donating uneaten food and an e-waste recycling program. The NFL also donates tons of materials that would otherwise be discarded and they run an urban forestry tree planting program.

These efforts are meant to reduce the Super Bowl's hefty environmental impact. The 2012 Super Bowl in Indianapolis used around 15,000 megawatt-hours of electricity. That is enough energy to power about 1,400 US homes for a year. The 2013 Super Bowl in New Orleans generated about 3.8 million pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, which is equivalent to the annual tailpipe emissions of 400 cars.

There is a massive environmental burden associated with all major sporting events. While critics rightly say that the Super Bowl event is an "energy guzzling, carbon emitting, waste generating machine," they overlook the positive steps that are being taken to reduce the game's environmental impact. Even more importantly they ignore the public relations bonanza that the event affords.

"It's not so much about how much of the problem do you create; it's about how much of the problem are you willing to take responsibility for," said Jack Groh, director of the NFL Environmental Program.

Both the Seahawks the Patriots are engaging a range of sustainability initiatives to reduce their carbon load. However, it is important to understand that sustainability in football is not only something that is showcased at the Super Bowl. The stadiums of many teams are becoming more sustainable. What is happening in football is part of a clear trend towards lower carbon sporting events. This emanates from a powerful value proposition where reduced environmental impacts generate cost savings.

The 2014 Superbowl, which up to then was the greenest ever, has been eclipsed by this year's event. As the nation's largest sporting event it is fitting that the Super Bowl is striving to be a sustainability leader. With one million people coming to the host city for the event, 120 million American television viewers and an international audience that is growing by 7 percent every year, the Super Bowl is an unparallelled opportunity to communicate the value of sustainability.

It is not only the scope of the Super Bowl's reach but who it reaches that make this event so powerful. The Super Bowl succeeds in reaching a particular demographic that may be less receptive to science driven assessments.

The co-founder of the Green Sports Alliance, Allen Hershkowitz, who is also a senior scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council explained it this way: "I always say, 13 percent of Americans follow science. Sixty-three percent of Americans follow sports."

Green Sports Alliance Executive Director Martin Tull added, the Super Bowl is "an amazing opportunity" to reach people you otherwise wouldn't.

"When you have teams you respect and admire, when sports teams start to talk about why sustainability is cool, it can inspire millions of people in a way that other organizations can't," Tull said.

The Super Bowl is an important venue to help the public to buy into a low carbon future. Popular support is essential if we are to succeed in making society wide changes to stave off some of the worst impacts of climate change.

Katy Perry's half time show may have generated considerable buzz but so have renewables, energy efficiency and recycling. Super Bowl XLIX was not only a win for the New England Patriots, it was a victory for sustainability.

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Video - First Superbowl to be Played Under LED Lights


LED lights take center stage at Super Bowl XLIX. The world's most watched sporting event between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Sea Hawks will be illuminated by LED lighting. This is the first time ever that LEDs are to be used to light a Super Bowl event. Ephesus lighting installed Cree's LEDs in the light fixtures at the University of Phoenix stadium. The lights were installed at the home of the Arizona Cardinals, this past fall making it the first NFL stadium to be lit by LED lighting.

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Olympic Sized Greenwashing at the Sochi Olympics

Super Bowl XLVlll the Greenest Ever

On Sunday, February 2, 2014, Super Bowl XLVIII will go down in history as the greenest such event ever. Everything from energy to food will be green at this year's Super Bowl and the stadium boasts extensive use of recycled materials. There was also an e-waste recycling initiative in the region to help green the event. There is even a green element to the advertising this year.

There are both practical and symbolic implications of this effort. Such initiatives help to raise awareness with people who otherwise may be nonplussed by sustainability. It will also significantly reduce the environmental footprint of the world's largest single sporting event.

Super Bowl XLIII marks the 16th consecutive year that the NFL has incorporated environmental projects into the management of a professional championship event.

The Environmental Program is about far more than building a green image. This event is about actually addressing environmental impacts cost effectively and leaving a permanent environmental legacy in the host community.Super Bowl events have engaged a wide variety of green initiatives included incorporating hybrid vehicles and offsetting travel emissions for both teams and NFL staff and officials. Super Bowl XLlll is no exception and it will rank as the greenest championship event ever.
Energy

A ring of solar panels encircle the event venue, Met Life Stadium (MLS). These solar panels provide electricity equivalent to 34 average homes’ annual energy consumption. Green power for the game will also be provided by Public Service Enterprise Group (PSEG) who is working in partnership with the NFL Environmental Program. PSEG will retire one renewable energy credit (REC) for every megawatt hour of electricity used. This includes the power used at MLS, team hotels and the Super Bowl Boulevard event.

A renewable energy credit (sometimes referred to as a renewable energy certificate or "greentag") is defined as "an environmental commodity that represents the added value, environmental benefits and cost of renewable energy above conventional methods of producing electricity, namely burning coal and natural gas. RECs help wind farms and other renewable energy facilities grow by making them more financially viable, thereby incentivizing development."

PSEG’s REC purchase will include New Jersey solar renewable energy credits and Community Energy, a certified Green-e Supplier, sourced from the Jersey – Atlantic City Wind Farm.

Food

The food for the XLVIII Super Bowl will be the “greenest in history." MLS and foodservice partner Delaware North Companies Sportservice are the first Certified Green Restaurant stadium as awarded by the Green Restaurant Association (GRA). They received a 2-star certification from the GRA. No other stadium in the world has achieved Certified Green Restaurant status and this is the largest food service operation ever to receive such certification. This is quite a feat given that there will be more than 200 on-site restaurants servicing up to 100,000 people in a day.

The GRA started in 1990 with the goal of reducing restaurants’ harmful effects on the environment. MetLife Stadium kiosks and food courts were evaluated using a certification system with seven categories: energy, chemical and pollution reduction, food, waste, water, disposables and furnishings and building materials.

A summary of their green food accomplishments include:

All waste kitchen oil is being converted to biodiesel fuel
Composting all kitchen scraps
Donating all leftover food
Recycling cardboard, plastic, glass, aluminum, and paper
Use of Energy Star equipment
Installation of waterless urinals, touchless sensor faucets, 1/2 gallon faucet aerators, and low-water landscaping
Eliminating all polystyrene foam containers


Recycled Materials

In addition to energy and food, the venue for this year's Super Bowl also incorporates recycled steel. A total of 40,000 tons of recycled steel went into the construction of the stadium, according to the building’s website. Recyclers took 84 percent of the stadium’s construction waste.

Recycling of e-Waste

A partnership between NY/NJ Super Bowl Host Committee, the NFL, Verizon and the Broadway Green Alliance has collected and recycled electronic waste in New York and New Jersey as part of a series of sustainability initiatives aimed at “greening” the Super Bowl and making a positive environmental impact in New York and New Jersey.

Advertising

Even Super Bowl advertising went green. Northern Minnesota egg farm, Locally Laid, was the runner up in a contest staged by Intuit which awarded the winner an expensive ($3 million) and highly coveted 30 second advertising spot. The winner was a toy company called GoldieBlox, whose mission is to encourage female engineers, and perhaps even help to support women who will one day in the future help us to manage the environmental crisis we face.

The GoldieBlox ad is scheduled to run in the third quarter of Sunday’s Super Bowl broadcast.

Related
Game to Make Super Bowl 50 a Net Positive Event
Solar Energy and other NFL Sustainability Initiatives
LEDs Light Up Super Bowl XLIX
Sustainability a Winner at Super Bowl XLIX
First Super Bowl to be Played under LED lights
World Cup 2014: An Environmental Post Mortem
Olympic Sized Greenwashing at the Sochi Olympics