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SA aims for green 2010
29/08/2006 08:06 - (SA)
Cape Town - Learning from previous hosts Germany, South Africa had a wonderful opportunity to ensure that the 2010 World Cup conformed to the principles of sustainable development, a top United Nations official said on Monday.
"If this is an issue that is considered only of interest to the environmentalists in the corner, then basically most of South Africa will not really pay much attention to it...
"You have to look at multiple benefits, and I think that is the key to making a green World Cup not just a four weeks fireworks event... but to use the four years that you now have to trigger the imagination of the nation," said Achim Steiner, the executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme (Unep).
Steiner was speaking at the opening day of Africa's first hosting of the Global Environment Facility in Cape Town.
The GEF is a partnership to protect the global environment and promote sustainable development.
On Monday it was announced that the fund had been replenished to the tune of $3.13bn.
Some of this money will be used to boost South Africa's public transport in the run-up to the 2010 World Cup, a project endorsed by football icons Ronaldo of Brazil and Zinedine Zidane of France.
Steiner said South Africa had the time to plan properly, mentioning the higher than expected uptake of the notion of using public transport in Germany.
"If you plan ahead you can make using public transport not a sacrifice, but in fact an advantage to getting to the World Cup. So I think, one of the things is that South Africa has the time to plan ahead so that it doesn't have to be an act of environmental faith that you use the public transport system. It simply is the most convenient and most practical way of getting there," he said.
Lessons could also be learnt about waste management, from the banal paper cups to larger items, as well as the role of designated soccer stadia to prevent them from becoming redundant during weekdays.
Speaking about a heightened "consciousness", Steiner said South Africa could multiply the use of enormous investments, with a particular emphasis on the role the private sector and civil society could play.
Tumi Makgabo, spokesperson for the country's 2010 World Cup, said the clear message was ensuring the country had an environmental plan to implement.
"It is an opportunity for us to take it seriously and to get started," Makgabo said.
"In terms of the local organising committee environmental friendliness is obviously something that is key, and it is something we are discussing," she said.
- SAPA
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