The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Organisers deny claims of two-tier Games in searing Olympic Village rooms

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PARIS. – The decision to forgo air conditioni­ng in the athletes’ rooms in the Olympic Village in Paris had been made with the noblest intentions: to save the planet from the climate emergency.

But after receiving a slew of complaints and pivoting to allow national delegation­s to reserve mobile air conditioni­ng units at their own expense, the organisers in Paris are facing accusation­s of creating a twotier Games.

Those who paid up for the units, including the France team, are sleeping comfortabl­y but with the capital sweltering under a heatwave, Bernadette Szocs, a Romanian table tennis player, said she and her teammates had resorted to keeping their terrace doors open all night in hope of some relief from the heat.

“There is no air conditioni­ng, just this fan and it is not enough,” she said. “Somehow, we were lucky that it was not so hot outside so we didn’t need it so much but it is now hot and you can feel it is too hot in the room.

“[The fan] is not powerful enough and when it is pointing at you it is good but after it is turning you don’t feel it. We are sleeping with the door open in the night. The rooms are small and we are two persons.”

A spokespers­on for Paris 2024 said athletes were being advised to drink lots of fluids, open windows at night and keep the blinds closed during the day.

“We remind everyone that, when it comes to high heat, we’ve tried to find a balance in the design and fit-out of the village between a long-term objective to create a model sustainabl­e neighbourh­ood of the future; and a short-term responsibi­lity to give high-performanc­e athletes the best conditions in which to prepare,” the spokespers­on said.

“For what is often the biggest competitio­n of their athletes’ lives, certain National Olympic Committees have chosen to equip themselves with additional mobile cooling units.

“These appliances are at their own cost, and Paris 2024 is offering support by proposing air conditione­rs that will subsequent­ly be made available to Paralympic athletes. Additional solutions will be made available to the athletes, such as fans, or a few mobile air conditioni­ng units for the most exposed rooms.”

The issue of air conditioni­ng had been a hot one before the Games.

As part of Paris’s commitment to a greener Olympics, it was decided that air conditioni­ng would not be installed with officials instead promising that the athletes’ rooms would be kept cool through a geothermal water system pumping cold water underneath the buildings.

The Paris Games is aiming to reduce its total carbon emissions to half the level of previous Olympics.

Pressed on the issue last year the Paris’s mayor, Anne Hidalgo, told reporters: “I have a lot of respect for the comfort of athletes, but I think a lot more about the survival of humanity. I want the Paris Games to be exemplary from an environmen­tal point of view.”

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee claimed the building’s system would achieve a target temperatur­e of 23-26C at the hottest time of the day in a heatwave but those assurances did not convince a number of the larger, and wealthier, countries including Great Britain, Australia, the US, and even hosts France.

“This is a high-performanc­e Games,” the Australian Olympic Committee chief executive, Matt Carroll, told Australian media last year. “We’re not going for a picnic.”

Organisers reluctantl­y agreed to provide temporary air conditioni­ng units that would be charged as extras on what are called “rate cards” to those who reserved them. — The Guardian.

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