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Can we save the climate through better bookkeeping? Yes!

PCH.VECTOR-FREEPIK

DOUBLE-ENTRY bookkeeping, invented in the 15th century by the mathematician Luca Bartolomeo de Pacioli, has been fundamental to economic growth ever since. Now, not just economic activity but the very future of the planet requires another revolution in bookkeeping.

The accounting standard needed today is one capable of measuring the amounts of greenhouse gases that are emitted and removed from the atmosphere, and the goal of reaching a “net zero” balance between the two. Although the Greenhouse Gas Protocol has provided an agreed-upon way to account for corporate carbon emissions, there is still no standard measure to assess where companies stand on the path to net zero.

As one example of the accounting issues involved, consider carbon offsets, which are verified credits equal to one ton of carbon dioxide, generated from projects such as protecting forests, planting trees or replacing charcoal stoves with solar ones. It’s been suggested that such offsets could account for a 10th of the effort needed to reach net-zero emissions. But many questions remain unanswered. For example, how quickly would a protected forest have deteriorated without the offset project? Would a set of newly planted trees have been planted anyway, and once planted would they stay in the ground permanently? Will a family provided with a solar stove use it as its only stove, or alongside the old charcoal one? And so on.

One way to simplify things would be to buy carbon-emission permits from governmental cap-and-trade systems, and then lock them away so that carbon polluters cannot use them to emit a ton of CO2. This would ensure that the permits amount to averted emissions. This is the approach adopted by Climate Vault, an effort associated with the University of Chicago. However, if this were the only kind of permissible carbon offset, many legitimate net reductions would be missed. A tree that might be planted solely to generate an offset, for instance, would go unplanted.

Recently, Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), a worldwide initiative to help companies reduce emissions, launched a process to develop a common definition and global standard for what net zero means for businesses. “SBTi created a North Star for corporate climate target-setting, and we are looking for it to now play a similar role for net-zero targets,” explained Tim Juliani of the World Wildlife Fund, which is part of the initiative.

SBTi requires member businesses to reduce their direct and indirect emissions to levels that are in line with the goals of the Paris agreement — that is, to levels that could limit warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius, and ideally 1.5 degrees. For businesses that have more than 40% of total emissions coming from their value chains, SBTi also requires actions to address emissions from their upstream and downstream activities. To date, roughly 1,600 companies have committed to set emissions-reduction targets through SBTi, including 63 among the Fortune 500. (A much larger number of companies, including 60% of the Fortune 500, have set emissions targets, but these vary in terms of what emissions are being measured, tracked and reported as well as the stated timetable for success.)

The Securities and Exchange Commission may also play an important role in setting emissions-disclosure requirements for corporations. It has already invited comments on how disclosure of carbon emissions and risks should be required from public companies. There would be substantial benefits to having a clear emissions-disclosure standard worldwide, so that multinational public corporate efforts could be better integrated into the global effort to hit net zero.

(One danger is that disclosure requirements for public companies might shift investments to privately owned companies not subject to the same rules. To the extent that happens, the effect on greenhouse gases will be undermined.)

De Pacioli’s invention promoted business activity and reduced, but clearly did not eliminate, unnecessary errors and outright fraud. And that’s basically what should be expected of new accounting standards for determining what it means for a company to reach net zero: fundamental effectiveness with imperfect adherence. Although it’s not yet clear exactly what net zero means, the stage is set for another pivotal accounting breakthrough.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Marina Bay Sands casino closes as virus spreads in Singapore

THE MARINA Bay Sands casino in Singapore will shut for two weeks after authorities detected a COVID cluster, the latest to emerge after an outbreak at a fishery port that pushed the government to reimpose social restrictions.

Eleven COVID cases have been linked to the casino owned by Las Vegas Sands Corp., prompting the decision to close until Aug. 5 for deep cleaning and to break the spread of the virus, the Health Ministry said on Thursday. Testing will be done on all staff working at the casino, which is part of a larger complex including a hotel, dining and luxury shopping mall.

The Marina Bay Sands casino cluster is a fraction of the 179 new coronavirus cases found on Wednesday. Most of those cases that day came from a fishery port cluster which appears to be at the epicenter of a resurgence in infections found in food markets, karaoke clubs and now one of two casinos in Singapore.

Singapore’s Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said the fishery cluster prompted it to reimpose stricter measures, including a ban on dining-in and limiting social interactions, starting from today.

“Unfortunately, while our fishmongers and stall assistants were going about earning an honest living, they got infected at the Port,” Mr. Ong said in a Facebook post. “As they went on to work at various markets around the island, many more cases in the community were seeded.”

Smaller clusters and a smattering of cases have since emerged across 41 food markets in Singapore. Although authorities are racing to track the fishmongers who visited the fishery port by offering free tests to them, supermarkets and food markets largely remain open.

Heath officials have speculated that the COVID infection from the fishery port cluster may have been introduced by fishing vessels from either Indonesia or other nearby countries. They said the virus variant detected from the cluster is similar to infections found in people coming into Singapore from Indonesia, which has become the new virus epicenter of Asia.

While Singapore’s cases are far less than the thousands of daily cases in Indonesia and Malaysia, the country is closely watched as its government tries to become the first major economy in Asia to transition away from a COVID-zero approach to instead treating the virus as endemic and more fully reopening.

Singapore initially pledged to announce further easing of curbs in the second half of July — when more than 50% of the population is fully vaccinated — and again when it hits the two-thirds mark around National Day on Aug. 9.

However, the resurgence in cases, the third such one this year after an outbreak in Changi Airport in May and a food market just outside the central business district in June, has raised the likelihood of a longer delay in reopening Singapore’s borders.

Health Minister Ong said about half of Singapore’s population has received two doses of vaccine and he expects the number to rise by a percentage point daily to about 64% or more in two weeks’ time. “That will put us in a much stronger and resilient position when we review” the restrictions, he said in the social media post.

Singapore has halted indoor exercise and cut social gatherings to two people from five, while banning dining in. These measures are expected to be reviewed in two weeks. — Bloomberg

India reports first human death from bird flu virus

WILLIAM MORELAND-UNSPLASH

NEW DELHI — An 11-year-old boy has died in India from a bird flu virus of the H5N1 strain, the first such fatality in the country, highlighting a potential new risk for the world’s second-most populous nation battling the coronavirus pandemic.

The boy was admitted at New Delhi’s premier All India Institute of Medical Sciences on July 2 and died on Tuesday after a multi-organ failure, a government statement said.

Health workers treating the patient and the boy’s family have been kept in isolation, and authorities have launched contact tracing, the statement said.

In Haryana, the boy’s home state in India’s north, the Animal Husbandry Department has not found any suspected cases of bird flu and has stepped up surveillance, it said.

India has seen more than half a dozen bird flu outbreaks in poultry in the past two decades, all of which were brought under control, with no human cases reported in the country previously. — Reuters

Two doses of Pfizer, AstraZeneca shots effective vs Delta variant — study

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

LONDON — Two doses of Pfizer or AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine are nearly as effective against the highly transmissible Delta coronavirus variant as they are against the previously dominant Alpha variant, a study published on Wednesday showed.

Officials say vaccines are highly effective against the Delta variant, now the dominant variant worldwide, though the study reiterated that one shot of the vaccines is not enough for high protection.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, confirms headline findings given by Public Health England in May about the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca, based on real-world data.

Wednesday’s study found that two doses of Pfizer’s shot was 88% effective at preventing symptomatic disease from the Delta variant, compared to 93.7% against the Alpha variant, broadly the same as previously reported.

Two shots of AstraZeneca vaccine were 67% effective against the Delta variant, up from 60% originally reported, and 74.5% effective against the Alpha variant, compared to an original estimate of 66% effectiveness.

“Only modest differences in vaccine effectiveness were noted with the Delta variant as compared with the Alpha variant after the receipt of two vaccine doses,” Public Health England (PHE) researchers wrote in the study.

Data from Israel has estimated lower effectiveness of Pfizer’s shot against symptomatic disease, although protection against severe disease remains high.

PHE had previously said that a first dose of either vaccine was around 33% effective against symptomatic disease from the Delta variant.

The full study published on Wednesday found that one dose of Pfizer’s shot was 36% effective, and one dose of AstraZeneca’s vaccine was around 30% effective.

“Our finding of reduced effectiveness after the first dose would support efforts to maximize vaccine uptake with two doses among vulnerable groups in the context of circulation of the Delta variant,” the authors of the study said. — Reuters

19-strong Team Philippines

National bets begin Tokyo Olympic Games campaign

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

TEAM Philippines begins its Tokyo Olympics campaign on Friday and is out to give the country its first-ever gold medal in the quadrennial Games.

The contingent is bannered by 19 athletes who have gone through a lot amid the pandemic and stayed resilient to realize their Olympic dreams.

Leading the team is weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz, 30, who is making her fourth Olympic appearance after competing in the 2008, 2012 and 2016 editions.

The Rio Games silver medallist admits Tokyo is different from the previous ones she saw action in but the goal is still the same for her — bring pride and honor to the country.

Joining Ms. Diaz are first-time Olympians, who despite making their debuts have made their names on the world stage.

Among them are US Women’s Open golf champion Yuka Saso, Ladies Professional Golf Association campaigner Bianca Pagdanganan, and pro golfer Juvic Pagunsan; world champions Caloy Yulo (gymnastics) and Nesthy Petecio (boxing); now-pro boxer Eumir Felix Marcial, world number six pole-vaulter EJ Obiena, and top 20 street skateboarder Margielyn Didal.

Completing the team are boxers Irish Magno and Carlo Paalam, rower Cris Nievarez, taekwondo jin Kurt Barbosa, shooter Jayson Valdez, weightlifter Elreen Ann Ando, judoka Kiyomi Watanabe, sprinter Kristina Knott, and swimmers Remedy Rule and Luke Gebbie.

They are competing under the collective push of “We’ll win the gold as one,” as the Philippine Olympic Committee describes the country’s campaign.

STRONGEST DELEGATION
For Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) Chairman William Ramirez, the national squad for the Tokyo Games is the “most prepared and strongest delegation” to date for the country given the steady support the athletes have gotten from both the government and private sector for their preparation.

“I think this is the most prepared and strongest delegation to the Olympics and expectations are high,” Mr. Ramirez said.

As per data provided by the PSC, the agency has released some P2 billion since 2017 for the national team, including for international exposure and training.

The sports agency also approved the budget for the country’s campaign in the Olympics amounting to P46.2 million.

It covers the international airfare, hotel and accommodation and allowances of athletes and officials as well as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) testing prior to departure, hotel quarantine expenses and insurance for COVID-19 treatment, travel and repatriation of the entire Philippine delegation.

Meanwhile, companies and groups like the MVP Sports Foundation, Smart Communications, Inc., PLDT and International Container Terminal Services, Inc., are among the steady supporters of the athletes in their Olympic push.

GOLD IS POSSIBLE
The Philippines winning a gold medal is possible, said Philippine chef de mission for the Tokyo Games Mariano Araneta.

“We, too, have athletes who are capable of winning. They are up there in the rankings in their respective fields. And when you’re at that level anything can happen,” he said.

As an added motivation, medal winners stand to gain a windfall for their efforts.

A gold is worth P33 million as the government will give P10 million under Republic Act 10699, or the National Athletes and Coaches Benefits and Incentives Act, Manny V. Pangilinan’s MVP Sports Foundation (P10 million) and San Miguel’s Ramon S. Ang (P10 million). Sportsman and lawmaker Mikee Romero pledged P3 million for gold.

The same entities and individuals combined have pledged to give P17 million for silver and P7 million for bronze.

For Ms. Diaz, the goal for them is clear, but said it is not going to be easy.

“The ultimate goal for every athlete in the Olympics is to win the gold, but it is not going to be given that easy. It’s a battle among the best of the best in the world. But we’re Filipinos, we’ll go there to fight.”

Catch the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 from July 23-Aug. 8 on TV5, One Sports, One Sports+, Cignal Play, PLDT, and Smart Gigafest.

Campaign start

BELOW is the schedule of the Filipino athletes seeing action at the Tokyo Olympics.

CRIS NIEVAREZ

(Rowing, Single Sculls)

July 23 Heats

July 24 Repechage

July 25 Semifinals E/F

July 26 Quarterfinals

July 27 Semifinals C/D

July 28 Semifinals A/B

July 29 Finals F/E/D

July 30 Finals C/B/A

CALOY YULO

(Gymnastics/All-Around)

July 24 Qualification

July 28 Finals (All-Around)

Aug. 1 Finals (Floor Exercise)

Finals (Pommel Horse)

Aug. 2 Finals (Rings)

Finals (Vault)

Aug. 3 Finals (Parallel Bars)

Finals (Horizontal Bars)

KURT BARBOSA

(Taekwondo/Flyweight -58kg)

July 24 Round of 16/Quarterfinals

Semifinals/Repechage

Bronze Match/Gold Match

NESTHY PETECIO

(Boxing/featherweight)

July 24 Round of 32

July 26 Round of 16

July 28 Quarterfinals

July 31 Semifinals

Aug. 3 Gold Bout

REMEDY RULE

(Swimming/100m

and 200m Butterfly)

July 24 100m Butterfly Heat

July 25 100m Butterfly Semifinals

July 26 100m Butterfinal Final

July 27 200m Butterfly Heat

July 28 200m Butterfly Semifinals

July 29 200m Butterfly Final

IRISH MAGNO

(Boxing/Flyweight)

July 25 Round of 32

July 29 Round of 16

Aug. 1 Quarterfinals

Aug. 4 Semifinals

Aug. 7 Gold Bout

JAYSON VALDEZ

(Shooting/10m Air Rifle)

July 25 Qualification/Finals

MARGIELYN DIDAL

(Skateboarding/Street)

July 26Preliminaries/Finals

CARLO PAALAM

(Boxing/Flyweight)

July 26 Round of 32

July 31 Round of 16

Aug. 3 Quarterfinals

Aug. 5 Semifinals

Aug. 7 Gold Bout

EUMIR FELIX MARCIAL

(Boxing/Middleweight)

July 26 Round of 32

July 29 Round of 16

Aug. 1 Quarterfinals

Aug. 5 Semifinals

Aug. 7 Gold Bout

HIDILYN DIAZ

(Weighlifting/-55kg)

July 26 Group B/Finals

KIYOMI WATANABE

(Judo/-63kg)

July 27 Round of 32/Round of 16

Quarterfinals/Repechage

Bronze Match/Gold Match

ELREEN ANDO

(Weightlifting/-64kg)

July 27 Group B/Finals

CARLO PAALAM

(Swimming/100m and 50m Freestyle)

July 27 100m Freestyle Heat

July 28 100m Freestyle Semifinals

July 29 100m Freestyle Finals

July 30 50m Freestyle Heat

July 31 50m Freestyle Semifinals

Aug. 1 50m Freestyle Finals

JUVIC PAGUNSAN

(Golf/Individual Stroke Play)

July 29 First Round

July 30 Second Round

July 31 Third Round

Aug. 1 Fourth Round

EJ OBIENA

(Athletics[Field]/Pole Vault)

July 31 Qualification

Aug. 3 Finals

KRISTINA KNOTT

(Athletics [Track]/200m Run)

Aug. 2 200m Run Heats/

Semifinals

Aug. 3 Finals

BIANCA PAGDANGANAN AND YUKA SASO

(Golf/Individual Stroke Play)

Aug. 4 First Round

Aug. 5 Second Round

Aug. 6 Third Round

Aug. 7 Fourth Round

PHL team ready for Olympic opening; coach out over COVID scare

TEAM Philippines is ready for the official opening of the Tokyo Olympic Games on Friday, but it still has no clue how ceremonies will be conducted as organizers are still keeping things under wraps.

“We really don’t know what the opening ceremony would be like. It’s a tightly kept secret,” Philippine Chef de Mission (CDM) Mariano Araneta communicated to local sports media from Japan.

He went on to say the details of the proceedings will be made known by 4 p.m. on Friday, or four hours before the opening ceremony at 8 p.m.

Just as they await for the opening, a member coach of the country’s delegation is out of the Olympics over coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) concerns.

Boxer Eumir Felix Marcial and judoka Kiyomi Watanabe will be the country’s flag-bearers. Mr. Marcial will be wearing a cocoon silk barong with a machine-embroidered pitchera design muslin inner shirt and light wool black pants. Ms. Watanabe, on the other hand, will be clad in a cocoon silk short blazer with a machine embroidered front and sleeves and neoprene spaghetti-strapped black inner blouse and neoprene black pants.

The team’s uniforms were procured by the Philippine Sports Commission.

Apart from the flag-bearers, also representing the country in the Parade of Nations are CDM Araneta, coaches Carlos Padilla (taekwondo) Nolito Velasco (boxing) and Daniel Bautista (skateboarding), as well as Philippine Swimming, Inc. President Lani Velasco and Gymnastics Association of the Philippines head Cynthia Carrion-Norton.

The opening ceremony is expected to last for three hours and to feature 4,500 participants — athletes and officials — from 205 member national Olympic committees.

OUT OF THE GAMES
Meanwhile, a coach in the Philippine team who was not identified is out after daily saliva tests on the individual days since arrival yielded back-and-forth positive and negative results for COVID-19.

Reports coming out of Tokyo on Thursday said that to mitigate any effect on the rest of the country’s contingent, top Philippine sports officials there decided to first isolate the individual, and thereafter send the coach for repatriation if another confirmatory test comes out negative. If it is positive, the individual will be brought to a quarantine hospital.

It was not immediately known if the people the coach had been in close contact with would be isolated, too, although they had yielded negative results for COVID-19 infection. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Creamline fights back to edge Black Mamba-Army in five sets

The Creamline Cool Smashers outlasted the Black Mamba-Army Lady Troopers in five sets in their PVL Open Conference match on Thursday. (PVL Media Bureau)

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

The league-leading Creamline Cool Smashers showed grit in fighting back and edging the Black Mamba-Army Lady Troopers in a thrilling five-set Premier Volleyball League Open Conference match at the PCV Socio-Civic and Cultural Center in Bacarra, Ilocos Norte.

Forced to the brink of defeat, the Cool Smashers dug deep and went on to beat the Lady Troopers, 20-25, 25-15, 25-27, 25-19, 15-13, to run their clean state in the ongoing tournament to 3-0.

For the second straight game, Tots Carlos made her presence felt, finishing with a game-high 26 points, 23 coming off kills. Alyssa Valdez had 20 while Risa Sato and Michelle Gumabao added 13 and 12 markers, respectively.

Creamline fell behind 1-2 in the match before marching on to take the fourth set and force a deciding frame.

In the fifth set, it opened with a 2-0 lead before Black Mamba-Army turned things around and fashioned a 9-1 blitz to take a commanding 9-3 advantage.

But the Cool Smashers would regroup, narrowing their deficit to one, 10-9, on the lead of Misses Carlos and Gumabao.

The Lady Troopers got added breathing room, 12-9, after, on a point by veteran Ging Balse-Pabayo and an unforced error by Creamline.

That set up the strong finishing kick by the Cool Smashers, who first tied the count at 12-all and then outscored their opponents, 3-1, the rest of the way, the last two points from Ms. Valdez (a kill and a block), to book the gutsy win.

“We’re so happy we were able to catch up. We just took it a point at a time and played our game and fortunately it paid off,” said Ms. Valdez after the game.

Jovelyn Gonzaga led the Lady Troopers (1-2) with 18 points. She was backstopped by Honey Royse Tubino with 14.

Creamline next plays on Sunday, July 25, against the PLDT Fibr Power Hitters while Black Mamba-Army tries to rebound on July 26 versus the Sta. Lucia Lady Realtors.

Kings, Beermen look to rebound after opening-game losses

THE defending PBA Philippine Cup champions Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings and San Miguel Beermen return to action on Friday looking to bounce back after absorbing losses in their opening games.

Barangay Ginebra takes on the Blackwater Bossing at 3 p.m. and San Miguel collides with the NLEX Road Warriors at 6 p.m. in Philippine Basketball Association  (PBA) matches set at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City.

The Kings lost to NLEX, 94-75, on July 18 in a game where they never really got their collective game going and found it hard to keep in step with the Road Warriors.

Japeth Aguilar top-scored for Barangay Ginebra in their first game, finishing with 15 points to go along with five rebounds.

Scottie Thompson had a near triple-double of 12 points, 12 rebounds and nine assists while LA Tenorio tallied 11 points, five boards and five dimes.

Off-season acquisition Christian Standhardinger had eight points and 10 rebounds but was obviously finding his way in the Barangay Ginebra system.

“C-Stan struggled during the game. It’s different from our practices of course. But he’s a smart player and knows what was lacking and I expect him to bounce back,” said Mr. Tenorio of their new teammate, who they got from a big-man trade with Northport for Greg Slaughter.

Mr. Aguilar, for his part, highlighted how they never got to soar in their first game of the season-opening PBA tournament.

“We were outworked and we lacked effort, especially on defense,” he said.

The Kings now try to rebound against the Bossing, who are off to a slow start in the tournament, dropping their first two assignments.

The trio of Simon Enciso, Kelly Nabong and Ed Daquioag is showing the way so far for the Nash Racela-coached Bossing.

Mr. Enciso leads in scoring with 15 points per game followed by Mr. Nabong (12 points and eight rebounds) and Mr. Daquioag (11 points).

SAN MIGUEL
San Miguel, meanwhile, is coming off a 93-87 defeat at the hands of the Meralco Bolts also on July 18.

The Beermen welcomed back six-time PBA most valuable player June Mar Fajardo from injury and saw league scoring leader CJ Perez make his San Miguel debut, but they were not enough to save the team from bowing down in its opening game.

Making matters worse for San Miguel, it lost explosive guard Terrence Romeo to a knee injury (hyperextended) in the NLEX game. He is expected to miss the next few games of his team.

Mr. Romeo top-scored for the Beermen with 18 points before getting hurt while Mr. Perez and Mo Tautua added 17 points apiece. Mr. Fajardo played 18 minutes in his first game back and had five points and five rebounds.

“This is our first competitive game of the season and despite the result, I think we did well,” said Mr. Perez post-game. “We had a good start but we could not sustain it. We hope to address that in our next game.”

Out to continue to frustrate the Beermen are the Road Warriors (1-1) who are fresh from their conquest of Barangay Ginebra last time around. Guards Kevin Alas and Kiefer Ravena towed NLEX in the win, finishing with 20 and 19 points, respectively. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Absent crowds, Tokyo Olympics have a shot at being green

SINGAPORE — No fans. No snack stands. No tour buses or hotel bookings. To many, this year’s Tokyo 2020 Olympics may seem like no fun. But to environmentalists, the pared down approach is exactly what’s needed in a world confronting climate change.

Initially, the Tokyo Organizing Committee had estimated the mega-event would result in emissions of some 2.73 million tons of planet-warming carbon dioxide (CO2) — more than what the cities of Vancouver or Melbourne reported emitting in all of 2019.

But without the traveling crowds to feed, house and entertain, that carbon footprint will be cut by 12%, to about 2.4 million tons of CO2, the organizers said in a sustainability report this month.

Combined with efforts to reduce, reuse, and recycle, the committee hopes the Games will be among the greenest in recent history.

“The carbon footprint in Tokyo would have risen enormously” had fans been allowed in the stands, said sociologist John Karamichas at Queen’s University in Northern Ireland, who has studied sustainability practices at the Olympics.

Organizers will publish final emissions figures after the Games.

Scientists consider it essential for the world to halve global emissions from 1990 levels by 2030, and to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, to avoid catastrophic climate change. The Tokyo Games will be a reminder of those targets, with forecasters warning of summer temperatures that are set to climb above 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) as the Games begin.

While Tokyo’s decision to bar spectators was aimed at minimising coronavirus risks, Karamichas said he hopes the Games sets a minimalist precedent that future Olympics follow.

“From an environmental perspective, there is a concept that small is beautiful,” he said. “This is the direction we are moving in.”

Researchers in April found that sustainability measures generally declined over 16 Summer and Winter Games held between 1992 and 2020, according to an analysis published in the journal Nature Sustainability.

Salt Lake City in 2002 ranked the best, while the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics and the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi ranked at the bottom.

The authors suggested downsizing the Olympics and rotating it between the same cities could make the Games more sustainable.

Rio had estimated its 2016 event would result in 3.6 million tons of CO2 emissions. Four years earlier at the London Olympics, sold-out arenas meant spectators accounted for a third of the 3.3 million tons of CO2 emitted, organizers said at the time.

Paris in 2017 pledged that the Games it hosts in 2024 will have less than half the carbon footprint of London 2012.

Tokyo is on track to reverse the rising emissions trend, and not just by keeping sports fans at bay.

The athletes’ village is being powered by renewable energy sources instead of fossil fuels. Electric vehicles are shuttling people between venues, and materials recycled from discarded electronics have been used to fashion the coveted medals.

In addition, the Tokyo Organising Committee acquired carbon credits worth 5.1 million tons of CO2 from the Tokyo Metropolitan Government’s and Saitama Prefecture’s cap-and-trade emissions schemes, which fund emissions-reduction efforts at factories and public buildings in the country.

“The Games must be a space for promoting decarbonization and sustainability,” said Masako Konishi, a conservationist at World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Japan and a member of the Tokyo Games sustainability committee.

“Otherwise, we are just adding to the pressure on the planet.” — Reuters

Osaka to play at US Open; ‘Big Three’ lead men’s field

NAOMI Osaka will defend her title at the US Open, organizers said on Wednesday, after she withdrew from this year’s French Open and Wimbledon on mental health grounds.

Japan’s Osaka stunned the tennis world when she quit the claycourt major in Paris in May following her first-round match after being fined and threatened with disqualification when she refused to attend mandatory post-match press conferences.

The world number two, who said she had social anxiety, also skipped Wimbledon but is scheduled to play at the Tokyo Olympics and then in Montreal next month.

Osaka will be part of a women’s field at the US Open that will also include world number one Ash Barty, who lifted her second major title at Wimbledon earlier this month.

A total of 15 major winners, including Simona Halep and Garbine Muguruza, are scheduled to feature in the women’s field at Flushing Meadows.

In the men’s section, former champions Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal — currently tied for the men’s record of 20 Grand Slam singles titles — will resume their quest for more silverware in New York.

World number one Djokovic, fresh from his third major triumph of 2020 at Wimbledon, is aiming to become the first man since Australia’s Rod Laver in 1969 to complete a calendar year sweep.

Another former champion, Andy Murray, who is currently ranked 104, failed to make the main draw but remains the first player on the alternate list.

The US Open will be held with 100% fan capacity from Aug. 30 to Sept. 12. — Reuters

He made them…

“I made them when I’m supposed to make them” was how Giannis Antetokounmpo, newly minted Most Valuable Player of the 2021 National Basketball Association Finals, described his output from the free throw line in the clincher the other day. To argue that the effort was nothing short of outstanding would be to undervalue it; considering his well-documented woes from the stripe, his 17-of-19 clip — and 12 of 13 in a 33-point second half — spoke volumes of his capacity to deliver in the clutch.

Indeed, Antetokounmpo was the engine that drove the Bucks to their first championship since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then Lew Alcindor) and Oscar Robertson teamed up to claim the hardware half a century ago. True, their defense remained stout. On the other hand, nobody else was clicking at the other end of the court, as their woeful 13-point second quarter underscored. So he “made them when I’m supposed to make them.” And not just from the line. He made them down low. He made them in coverage. He made them from everywhere, and in all types of situations.

By the time the battlesmoke cleared, Antetokounmpo put up a masterpiece that stands among the very best in the annals of the sport. His 50-point production in a closeout victory equaled that of Bob Pettit’s 60 years ago, and he capped his dominance with 14 boards, two dimes, and five swats. Given his determination to succeed in front of an overflow crowd at the Fiserv Forum, the Suns didn’t stand a chance.

Pundits can argue that Antetokounmpo was fated to win. After all, he looked far from ready when the Finals started; he missed the last two contests of the Eastern Conference Finals due to a knee injury, further fueling queries on his readiness, or lack thereof. That the Bucks promptly lost the first two matches served to increase the pressure on him to perform. Once he got his groove, however, there was no stopping him. And while he did get support from such notables as Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday, Game Six was all him all the time.

Today, the Bucks are champions, and Antetokounmpo has nothing left to prove. He has come a long way since he was taken with the 15th pick in the 2013 draft. Questions dotted his campaign to the top, even after he claimed two consecutive MVP awards. Not anymore. Because he “made them when I’m supposed to make them.” Enough said.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.