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The Olympic Forest

International Olympic Committee and Tree Aid to plant an ‘Olympic Forest’ in Mali and Senegal
The Olympic Forest

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has announced details of its project to plant the ‘Olympic Forest’ in Mali and Senegal, an element of the IOC’s climate-positive strategy.
 
The project is a contribution to the Great Green Wall initiative, which restores degraded landscapes across Africa’s Sahel region.

It will involve planting around 355,000 native trees across approximately 90 villages in Mali and Senegal – host of the Youth Olympic Games Dakar 2026 – and will cover a combined area of around 2,120 hectares.

‘Climate positive’ by 2024

As well as planting trees, the Olympic Forest will contribute to increasing the local communities’ food and economic security.

The IOC will work with local communities to ensure the Olympic Forest creates diverse social, economic and environmental benefits in an area that has experienced increased droughts and floods, leading to a steady degradation of land and sources of food.
 
The IOC has committed to reducing its carbon emissions by 30% by 2024, and by 45% by 2030, in line with the Paris Agreement.

By compensating for more than 100% of the IOC’s residual emissions, the Olympic Forest will help the organisation become ‘climate positive’ by 2024.

The Olympic Forest is expected to sequester 200,000 tonnes of CO2 equivalent (t CO2e), which is more than the IOC’s estimated emissions for the 2021-2024 period and similar to the emissions of approximately 32,000 return flights from Geneva to Tokyo.
 

‘Addressing climate change is one of the IOC’s top priorities, and we are fully committed to reducing our emissions in line with the Paris Agreement.

‘The Olympic Forest will support communities in Mali and Senegal by increasing their climate resilience, food security and income opportunities, and will help the IOC become climate positive already by 2024. The Olympic Movement is about building a better world through sport, and the Olympic Forest is an example of that.’

THOMAS BACH
IOC president

Improving soil health

By helping to restore degraded soils, the Olympic Forest will increase the food and economic security of local communities and will help them adapt to the consequences of climate change.

It will increase local biodiversity and enable sustainable agricultural practices, such as agroforestry, and the commercial use of non-timber products, such as nuts, fruits and fibres.

‘With Dakar 2026, our goal is to go beyond sport and use the Games as an opportunity to raise young people’s awareness, and beyond them that of the various stakeholders, about today’s sustainability challenges and ways in which we can help address them.

‘This approach is in line with the country’s priorities and reflected in the Dakar 2026 Edition Plan. The Olympic Forest paves the way in this direction.’

MAMADOU DIAGNA NDIAYE
IOC Member and president of the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games Organising Committee

Africa’s Great Green Wall

To create the Olympic Forest, the IOC will work with Tree Aid, a non-profit organisation with over 30 years’ experience working with people in the drylands of Africa.

Tree Aid helps to tackle poverty and the effects of the climate crisis by growing trees and restoring and protecting land.
 
In its initial phase, the project will involve engaging with local communities to analyse their needs, identifying project areas, establishing a monitoring and evaluation plan and setting up plant nurseries.

Planting, which will involve a diverse range of native tree species, is scheduled for the second and third quarters of 2022.
 
17 June, the project’s launch date, is the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought. It follows the recent launch of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, of which the Great Green Wall is a flagship project.
 
The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) both provide advice to the project.

‘The Olympic Forest will be an inspirational contribution to Africa’s Great Green Wall and shows how conserving and restoring nature can address climate change while generating sustainable livelihoods.

‘Through this initiative, the IOC is showing climate leadership within the sports world and beyond, and highlighting that we all have a role to play in preserving a healthy planet for future generations.’

INGER ANDERSEN
Executive director of UNEP

Growing the forest

The carbon savings generated by the Olympic Forest will be independently certified according to Plan Vivo, a standard that supports communities and smallholders at the forefront of the climate crisis.

Plan Vivo also guarantees the creation of socio-economic benefits for local communities and additional environmental benefits such as the restoration of damaged ecosystems.
 
While the initial project will last four years, the IOC plans to open it up in the future to other organisations in the Olympic Movement so that they can contribute and grow the Olympic Forest further.

‘Tree Aid is honoured to be working with the IOC to deliver this ambitious and exciting new initiative.

‘As we enter the UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration, making the Great Green Wall a success is more important than ever to secure the future of the region and the people who live there. The Olympic Forest shows what is possible when we all work together.’

TOM SKIRROW
Tree Aid CEO
 

In addition to its own efforts to become climate positive, the IOC announced in March 2020 that all Olympic Games will be required to be climate positive from 2030 onwards – removing more carbon from the atmosphere than they emit.

Until then, Organising Committees, including Tokyo 2020 and Beijing 2022, have committed to holding carbon-neutral Games, while Paris 2024 has recently announced its ambition to stage the first climate-positive Games.

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