Today, Explained - A green medal for Paris?
Episode Date: August 9, 2024Paris wanted this to be the greenest Olympics ever. We assess. This episode was produced by Denise Guerra, edited by Amina Al-Sadi, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Rob Byers and Patrick B...oyd, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast Support Today, Explained by becoming a Vox Member today: http://www.vox.com/members Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Olympics are ending Sunday, but let's talk about how they started real quick.
They started the way every Olympic starts, with the torch.
Some 10,000 people, athletes, a pastry chef, Sacrebleu Snoop Dogg,
they all carried the torch across France.
And as always, during the opening ceremony,
it all culminated in the lighting of the Olympic cauldron.
Except this time, they didn't actually light the Olympic cauldron.
The Paris 2024 Olympic cauldron is literally smoke and mirrors.
Instead of a burning flame, we get mist and light that appears to lift up a hot air balloon.
The idea was to do the cauldron without pollution because Paris was trying to have the greenest games ever.
They wanted to cut the carbon footprint of London in 2012 and Rio in 2016 by
50%.
On Today Explained, we're going to see how they did.
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Today,
today it rained.
Today explained, Sean Romsverm here to evaluate the Greenest Olympics Today, today it rained.
Today explained Sean Romsverm here to evaluate the greenest Olympics ever with an American in Paris, Mary Winston Nicklin.
I'm a contributor to National Geographic and I wrote and reported the cover story on the Seine River for the August issue of the magazine.
The Olympics weren't just trying to go green.
They were also trying to be clean.
There's been a massive $1.5 billion cleanup project,
and the Olympics, obviously, is center stage here. The Seine has played an incredible role throughout the Olympics,
and it's a venue for sporting events also.
For people who have never had the pleasure,
can you tell us a bit about the Seine and its history especially?
The Seine, when she starts on her travels, lazily flows from her source.
I mean, this is seriously romanticized.
It's a river that ignites the global imagination.
And Paris wouldn't be Paris without the Seine.
It only exists because of the Seine.
And there's a two-mile stretch of the river,
and you've got monuments that people adore.
The Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame, the Louvre,
the 37 bridges illuminated at night.
And to borrow the phrase, the Seine sparks joy, right?
And the Seine is linked to the history of France.
The storied Seine provides a natural bastion winding through the heart of the capital.
The men took their position.
The severed German forces could neither oppose the Allied entry from the...
It's part of French heritage.
So to stage the Olympics opening ceremony on the Seine,
the first time the event has ever been staged outside a stadium,
is an over-the-top way of showcasing this beauty, this heritage.
On a rainy night in Paris, the first ever floating opening ceremony featured a zipline to Notre Dame, a light show at the Eiffel Tower,
and performances by Lady Gaga.
And hey, it's inspiring wanderlust, you know, to boost future tourism.
You can live on the Seine, eat and drink, make love, get married, take yoga, run a business, peruse old books, watch fireworks.
Okay, joy, love, marriage proposals, culturally important, historically significant, a hub for France's tourism.
Tell me, before these Olympic Games, what condition this national treasure was in?
Okay. So, I mean, let's be real. The Seine has been used as a dumping ground for centuries.
You had medieval butchers, you know, throwing animal parts in the water. for centuries.
You had medieval butchers, you know, throwing
animal parts in the water.
Animal parts? We don't even want to
go there. I mean, such nasty stuff.
No, I want you to go there. I want you to go there. I want people
to know. Right. I mean, tanners putting
dyes and chemicals. I mean,
you know, laundry
soap, human excrement.
Like, just awful. But this was really nothing
compared to the Industrial Revolution. At this time, you had tons of factories. And so these
were new toxic discharges that are going in the city, you know, these factory pollutants.
And what else you had is an exploding population. So you went from 1.2 million inhabitants in 1851 to 2.2 million inhabitants in 1881. So this, I mean, the stuff going on in the Middle Ages just had no comparison to the Industrial Revolution. So as a result, Napoleon III at this time appointed an urban planner named Haussmann
to oversee a big urban renewal project.
And part of that city transformation included a new sewer system.
So this was an engineering triumph for the city at the time.
Yet, because these underground pipes and collectors put wastewater into the Seine,
it was toxic for the health of
the river. But it was very much a good thing for Paris' health, if that makes sense. This system,
many old cities used a dual sort of sanitation system where stormwater, where rain runoff is collected into the same sewer system as sewage.
So the complications come with heavy rains when this can overflow into the city up until the modern age.
The more recent cleanup project has really focused on improving existing infrastructure to prevent that scenario from happening.
The recent cleanup project went into effect in 2015 as part of the candidacy for the Olympic Games.
We have an obligation to transform our cities in the face of climate change.
The Games are an opportunity to speed things up.
So how exactly did they go about it this time around?
So this is such a good question.
I get this a lot.
Like, how do you clean a river?
Like, what's going on? Are there, like, filters?
Are there nets?
Like, what is this?
No.
I mean, cleaning a river is preventing the bad stuff from getting in there, right?
The harmful pollutants, the
bacteria, that's what's going on. We did 16 samplings and most of them had a really high
rate of two bacterias, which are E. coli and Enterococcus. So in essence, we talked about
that dual, you know, the sewage system where
stormwater comes into the sewer and can be released in times of heavy rainstorms. So we
want to avoid the scenario. So basically what's happened is there's been a lot of new infrastructure,
rainwater tanks, collectors that have been built. One that I went inside, it's incredible.
I mean, it can hold the equivalent of 20 Olympic-sized swimming pools of rainwater.
And so, and when you're down in there, I mean, it's like, it's cavernous. It goes deep underground.
And the guys who built this, I mean, there's 40 engineers involved in this project.
Paris is one of the most densely
populated cities in the world. And underground is dense with, you know, catacombs, metro tunnels,
electrical wires. So to implement this was a real technical feat. And basically what this does,
this tank, which is on the left bank in Paris, what this does is it collects rainwater
in times of heavy downpours and then slowly releases it back into the sewer system to go
to the water treatment plants so that there is not an overflow into the Seine.
Okay, so it sounds like they put a lot of effort into cleaning up this river
to get it ready for the games, to get it ready for athletes who were told to swim in it.
But an issue here, and I'm sure you saw the video because it felt like everyone saw the video, is people were like vomiting after swimming in the Seine.
Olympics triathlete Tyler Mislawchuk leaves it all on the line at the Paris Olympics, literally. The Canadian athlete is
going viral for throwing up 10 times after swimming in the Seine River during the men's
triathlon July 31st. I've been keenly following the headlines and looking at the videos, as I'm
sure you have. And I think especially there were concerns I saw when a Belgian athlete got sick
after swimming in the Seine. The latest news that this sickness wasn't linked to E. coli.
They haven't made links with the Seine.
From what I understand, the Paris 2024 organizers and World Triathlon
were following protocols with water quality tests.
They postponed the men's triathlon.
Unfortunately, heavy rains still play a role.
Usually, Paris gets the most rainfall in the winter. The summers are dry. But climate change
has led to these downpours, which impact water quality still. And, you know, to put things in
perspective, many beaches around the world will close after heavy rains because of chemicals in the runoff.
And the Seine faces an uphill battle when it comes to climate change.
So all said, was Paris ready with the Seine? You said this is sort of still a work in progress.
Was it a bit of a failure that it wasn't done by the Olympics or was it done enough? What do you think? I don't think of it as a failure at all because, like I said, this is like a long-term
project and there's a lot of really terrible, let's face it, sort of gutting environmental
news out there. It's really depressing. And if you look at the big picture, this is really a positive thing.
The Seine was basically biologically dead in the 1970s. There were only a few species of pollution
resistant fish which could live in it, you know? And now you've got like 40 in the Paris region.
And it's not just biodiversity and preserving nature in this super densely populated city,
but, you know, like I said before,
offering citizens a place to cool off in the summer
because of these heat waves.
We don't have AC.
You know, I know this sounds crazy,
and starting next summer,
we'll have three places open to swimming in the Seine.
I know they're going to test it daily,
and I plan to swim.
I mean...
You're going for it.
I am going for it. Yes, there is still work to be done, but can we take a step back and look at this long-term project, 10 years in the making, and how far we've come from like a biologically dead river to one that's filled with life
and swimmable, like that deserves applause.
Please clap.
Mary Winston Nicklin wrote about the send for the August issue of National Geographic,
NatGeo.com.
When we're back on Today Explained, we're going to assess the rest of the green efforts at the Paris Games.
Today Explained is back.
We got Madeline Orr with us.
She's an assistant professor of sport ecology at the University of Toronto, Go Blue.
She just got back from the Olympics.
I went.
I went to the Olympics, yeah.
But I'm like seven months pregnant and the heat in Paris was like, ah, this is a bit much. I'm going to go for a week, but I'm not down for like 17 days of this.
Wait, is Paris like a lot hotter than, I don't know, say Toronto in the summer?
It's honestly kind of similar, but there's no AC to be found in Paris.
So that makes it very much worse.
And this was part of the controversy of these Paris games. I heard about them not providing
AC to athletes and some American athletes even talking about bringing their own AC.
Yeah. So the organizers are trying to work on how do we reduce energy at every turn in these
Olympics. And one of their brilliant plans that kind of failed in the end, but it was like a good
idea in theory, was they were going to use geothermal cooling systems in the athletes village, which basically is like you drill way down into
the ground and you pull up water and use that cold water to like cool the building. The best it can
do though is like 11, 10 to 11 degrees Fahrenheit colder than whatever the temp is outside. So if
you get into like 9,500 degrees, like that's not doing much like you're
still sleeping in uncomfortable conditions so athletes were freaking out ahead of the games
many national organizations so like the national teams from different countries
complained and said we're breaking our own ac units if that isn't the most american move
i've ever heard no i'm kidding because it's not just the states it's also australia denmark
great britain greece italy, and Canada that are doing the same.
Which, like, fair enough, honestly.
It's a health and safety thing.
And then they kind of backpedaled in Paris.
So three weeks before the Games, they tried to pull a fast one, and they brought 2,500 AC units into the village.
Wow.
Yeah, so they totally bailed on the plan.
I mean, like the cooling
system that they had is like still in the building, but like that's not what they're using.
And they were trying to have like what the sustainability Olympics too?
Yeah, they so the Paris Olympics have, you know, pretty big promises that were made very long time
ago. 30 years ago, 1994, the International Olympic Committee met their Congress, had their big Congress in Paris.
And they decided way back then that the environment would be the third pillar of the Olympic movement alongside sport and culture.
Like way high up there as a priority.
The environment was built in at an early stage. The most interesting part was perhaps
our efforts to try and change the attitude of people that they should be concerned that they
should learn why we did this. Now they didn't really like do anything about that for a long time
and then Paris was bidding for the games. The 2015 Paris Agreement happened, and they were like,
OK, we should be pulling these things together.
This is the city of sustainability.
We got to do a good job of this.
And so they made all kinds of crazy promises about most sustainable Olympics ever and blah,
blah, blah.
Paris 2024 has set itself a target that is very clear but very hard to achieve.
That's to say, cut our carbon footprint by half
compared with previous games.
And to do this, obviously, it would be premature
to say too much, but over the last seven years,
we have proved it's possible to act at every level,
building, energy, nutrition, transport.
Like, great in theory.
It just, like, doesn't actually work in practice
because when you bring millions of fans to a city
for what's basically a huge party for two weeks,
that's not sustainable.
So we've heard about the Seine.
We've heard about the AC.
How else was Paris aiming to make this
the most sustainable Olympics ever?
So they had plans around food. That's kind of like one of the big buckets they were working on.
The venues, if you're a fan and you go to a venue, you'll notice that like half of the
menu is vegan, vegetarian options. Like that's really cool. But they also did that in the
Athletes' Village. And that caught a lot of shade from athletes who were not totally delighted
to suddenly have vegan and vegetarian diets imposed on them the week of their competition.
Like, it's all, I think, my impression when I was there is, like, it's very well-intentioned.
They had really good ideas around, let's introduce as much sustainable options as we can,
wherever we can, and that was the right idea. It's just like the execution fell a little short.
You disappointed me. You disappointed me. I don't think it's very good, at least what we're
having in the dining hall. I definitely think French food is good, but what we're having in
there, I don't think is the best. So I'm answering the most commonly asked questions to me while I'm in the Olympic Village
by people who are not here. Is the food good? Not really. No. So, okay. AC, the river, the food.
Was there anything else? Transit. They worked on transit like crazy. So everyone was on transit.
There was like no option to drive really anywhere downtown. So everyone's on transit. That was great. They
implemented about 400 kilometers of bike lanes that are permanent now in the city. So like,
that's cool. 12 new bus routes that are permanent now, like serving areas that didn't have good
transit options. So like they, they did a lot of good stuff. It just still felt a little greenwashy
to me. Like it just felt like they promised more
than they would be able to deliver. And, you know, you've talked about the sand, like they
backtracked, like they were trying to figure out how to make that work. And they got very,
very, very close. Like it was a huge improvement, like cleanest it's ever been in 100 years,
still not quite safe enough for athletes. So it's a bit of a mixed bag on the outcomes there.
Do you think these games were a genuine effort
to take a different approach to hosting an event of this scale?
Or do you think there was a lot of posturing?
Like both.
I think the team that was working on sustainability
at the Paris Organizing Committee
did everything that was actually in their power.
The problem is that when you host an Olympics,
the model of hosting is so based on a tourism spectacle
that brings millions of fans to a city
that there's very little they can do with that
to really cut the big emissions
which come from international fans.
But now that we're reaching the end of these games,
how did the sustainability goals reached or missed compared know, missed compared to like London, Rio, Beijing, whatever?
Paris is going to come out on the record books as looking much, much greener than London and Beijing and Tokyo, for that matter, and Rio and the more recent ones.
That said, those were the least sustainable games on record, all of them.
So, like, when I look at the total record of this over history,
it, like, has been a precipitous downhill slide for a very, very long time,
as they've gotten bigger and bigger and bigger and more grandiose and spectacular.
And Paris is basically leveling that line, but not necessarily in an upswing.
So you're saying there's really no sustainable way to do an event like this that hosts, you know,
10 plus million foreign people who all travel via airplane.
Yeah, yeah. What I'm saying is that having a quote unquote sustainable Olympics is an oxymoron.
Yeah.
It doesn't exist.
So that means it's not going to exist in 2028 in Los Angeles, not exactly known for being the most sustainable place in the world.
They might have twice as much Snoop Dogg,
but there's not a lot of hope for Green Olympics?
I'm actually very hopeful for L.A.,
but with one huge asterisk next to hopeful.
LA is using all existing venues.
That's awesome.
LA has a lot of the infrastructure already in place.
They don't have to build a whole lot.
They're not building an athlete's village.
They're going to the college campuses.
There's a lot of, for me, gold stars next to their plan.
Go Bruins.
Yeah.
That said, there's no ground game on transport in LA.
Like, not. Right. Traffic said, there's no ground game on transport in LA. Like, not.
Right.
Traffic is the name of the game.
So I don't know.
They haven't announced what their plan is on that yet.
But I can imagine just an atrocious amount of traffic.
And LA is showy.
We know this about LA.
LA likes to show off.
So, yeah, right.
Is LA going to be the city that turns around and says, yeah, we're going to cut international
tourists coming in?
Like no chance, no chance.
They're going to park Snoop Dogg at the airport in arrivals, welcoming people in to like attract
even more tourism.
And I understand that.
I do.
I get it.
I also think that from a sustainability standpoint, like that sucks.
Tourism is the problem and it is extraordinary. In Rio, I was in Rio and you can imagine the
amount of trash in Rio just with the population starting there. They basically doubled the trash
in the city over like the course of two weeks. So, and it's not like all of a sudden you have
double the trash bins and trucks and all the rest coming in to sort it out. Like it, it's just a huge production and it's
really hard to like explain what that feels like and looks like to the communities that are impacted
by it that are like living right next to it. So, um, good luck LA. I wish you all the best.
Uh, but it's, it's a huge burden.
Madeline Orr, Sport Ecology, University of Toronto. She's also just published a book.
It's titled Warming Up, How Climate Change is Changing Sports.
Find it wherever you find your books.
Our program today was mixed by Rob Byers and Patrick Boyd,
edited by Amina Alsadi and fact-checked by Laura Bullard, who's still mad at Paris.
We were produced by Denise Guerra, who's leaving us for Michigan today.
Thank you for your service, Denise.
The rest of the team here at Today Explained includes Hadi Mawagdi, Amanda Lou Ellen, Miles Bryan, Victoria Chamberlain, Halima Shah, Avishai Artsy, Peter Balanon Rosen, Andrea Christen's daughter,
Matthew Collette, Miranda Kennedy, and Noelle King. If you, like me, can't get enough Noelle
in your life, she's hanging out with Kara Swisher on the Pivot podcast this week. Pivot does not
use music by Breakmaster Cylinder, but we do. Today Explained is distributed by WNYC. The show
is a part of Vox. You can support our journalism by joining our membership program today. You can go to vox.com slash members to sign
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