I’ve been talking about energy efficiency in professional sports
for a while now and I realize how little I knew about any of it until recently.
I was aware of the NBA’s Green Week
and the 49ers efficient new stadium, but
I never would have guessed the extent of the industry’s green achievements
unless I really wanted to look into it. So I guess it’s a good thing I was
curious about this and have an outlet to share my exciting findings with the
world!!
As you’ve all learned by now, the NRDC put together a massive
report about all things good and green in the sports industry, but they’ve also
played quite the hand in helping the various teams, leagues and venues they
highlight in the report develop green websites, events and initiatives.
The NRDC, with the NHL, launched a green website,
designed to advertise the League’s green events (such as developing community
gardens), promote green living tips and announce NHL green contributions (like
their donation of
1,600 trees in May 2013 to The Nature Conservancy).
The NHL and NRDC have collaborated numerous times to ensure hockey fans around
the country are aware of environmental issues and initiatives. 2010 Winter
Classic spectators even attended a panel discussion about how going green can benefit
the economy.
The NHL’s green initiatives are vast, impressive and encouraging. Tickets are printed on recycled paper; unsold food is given to the Rock and Wrap It Up! Initiative to fight poverty; free public transportation passes are available to ticket holders. The list goes on. As shown in the PSA below, hockey players need ice to play their game and the ice in this world is quickly disappearing. Let’s change that. Let’s keep hockey around. I know I’m not the only who wants that.
I can’t express how awesome I think it is that such a huge, energy-sucking, wasteful industry (before you get mad at me for saying that, think about it for a second) is making major moves to cut its contribution to greenhouse gas emissions and landfills. Their accomplishments have been so great that they’re starting to rub off on college sports, too!
O-H-I-O! Photo Source: FaceBook |
This is great for NCAA basketball, but hopefully there will
be more green efforts in college sports as a whole. The Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education conducted a sustainability survey for NCAA athletic departments and while some responses are
encouraging, others are not. There is definitely room for improvement, but the
important thing is that environmentally responsible endeavors have begun. All
in all, as both an energy efficiency enthusiast and a major sports fan, I feel
great about where the sports industry is headed and what we will see in the
near future.