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The Greenwash Brigade

Can Super Bowl XLII teach sports fans about global warming?

The biggest teach-in in the U.S. is the Super Bowl, when almost 100 million of us gather around TV sets from coast to coast and enjoy the show.

We will learn lessons of dedication: how Tom Brady wakes up early in the morning to practice hard enough to unleash his potential and be this year’s MVP and one of the best quarterbacks in history as he chases his fourth Bowl title. We will learn lessons of teamwork: where each player trusts and relies on each other to achieve common goals, something the New England Patriots have perfected so far this year in their winningest undefeated run. And we will learn lessons of hope: how a NY Giants team has overcome tough odds and a mediocre early season to vie for the title. Thanks to some recent steps by the NFL, the Super Bowl may also share some lessons on how our country can tackle one of the biggest public policy challenges of this century, global warming.

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Under the leadership of Jack Groh, the NFL Environmental Program is, for the third straight year, reducing the carbon footprint of the big game. While federal policymakers drag their feet, the NFL is fighting climate change next Sunday by offsetting 500 tons of greenhouse gas emissions through support of wind, solar, geothermal and landfill power as well as planting dozens of acres of trees in the host state of Arizona. They also have recycling initiatives and source many of the products locally. Their website has some info on the effort (including the image to the right). But the big question is whether they prioritize the climate mitigation lesson to the enormous audience. If viewers are inspired to purchase efficient light bulbs, carpool, and support new wind turbines rather than coal plants, then we can get our emissions falling and join Europe as climate leaders rather than laggards.

The more we can make all big events climate responsible, the more we can grow a culture that transforms our country. For further progress, I would love to hear that the NFL and other professional sports leagues commit in 2008 to reducing the emissions of all of their games, not just the championship. The NFL can join Google, 480 universities who are dedicated to climate neutrality, and others who promote climate responsibility throughout their powerful institutions and help it become a part of mainstream culture.

Mitigation efforts in one of the biggest annual games in all of sports are definitely a step in the right direction. Here’s to many more steps that take advantage of the educational opportunity to inspire our country full of sports fans to be climate responsible!

Comments (6)

Jim Nicolow | January 28, 2008 6:20 PM PT

We definitely need some national attention focused on addressing our carbon emissions. With only 5% of the world's population, we produce one-quarter of global greenhouse gas emissions. While there is growing public awareness about the need to address our disproportionate impact, most folks seem to give more thought to "paper or plastic" than where their electricity comes from. Hopefully the Super Bowl's green message will help to heighten the focus on carbon emissions,... assuming you can hear the message over the din of advertisements encouraging us to consume more beer and pickup trucks.

Janne Flisrand | January 29, 2008 7:11 PM PT

The Super Bowl is making the effort to offset emissions. Looking at the Super Bowl environmental program site, it seems they are also working hard to recycle and reuse waste.

If they are serious about their green efforts, they need to find ways to use less. Could they invest in improving the energy efficiency (or water - Phoenix isn't known for its many lakes) of the stadium? Food recovery is a start, but what about composting? Before recycling could they work with vendors to create less cardboard, paper, aluminum, plastic and other waste? Donating required materials reduces waste and is helpful to recipients, but could they be more careful to order only what they need?

By the way, how did a sports equipment and book donation project make the "environmental program" page? ...are they thinking it's a reuse activity?

Heidi Siegelbaum | January 30, 2008 10:40 AM PT

This is a fabulous story and of course the NFL is surpassing the Feds in responding to global warming. Being the behavioral junkie I am, I was immediately drawn not to the NFL's methods of greening but the endless opportunities to message to those millions of fans about a wide range of environmental issues, the most pressing of which is guess what...

I'd love to see the NFL follow the lead of the Coalition for Environmentally Responsible Conventions and, in addition to climate change reductions, find a way to avoid using the zillions of disposable toxic-laden forest products used in take-out in every venue I see (including our local coffee giant). Again, here's another connection with losing forests and poorly regulated toxics in products.

I agree with Dennis that reducing the climate footprint of the NFL should be integral to their operations and not just saved for the championship. But again, I was struck by just how the NFL, in the midst of a crazed crunchy food and libations-fest, would be able to insert a global warming message. Through its advertisers? What would happen if the NFL managed to convince the networks that all its advertisers had to incorporate some green message, indelibly linked with some consumer product? Unlikely indeed.

What about using social networks to promote the NFL's Environmental program? I found a veritable goody bag of research about communicating about climate change and thought about the different ways to reach the infinitely diverse demographic watching the Superbowl (it's more likely my mother will be watching rather than myself). Still shocking to many of us, most Americans still get their information about science (opens a PDF) and technology from television, followed by newspapers and the internet. Whatever the method chosen, it'll have to be easy, funny, downloadable and capable of going viral, in the newly emerging lexicon of professional advertisers and marketing mavens.

Dave | February 3, 2008 10:27 AM PT

What about the hundreds (or thousands?) of private corporate jets being flow in for the big game carrying only a few people in each?

Dennis | February 3, 2008 11:21 AM PT

Dave,
You make an important point. The travel to and from major events is a large contributor of greenhouse gas emissions. A key question is who we make responsible for those emissions - are those the emissions of individuals who ride on the jets or the companies who charter them or the NFL itself?
I tend to think that the event organizer is responsible for the emissions of staff travel, energy consumption in the stadium, and energy embedded in the products used by the game (from the Gatorade consumed by players to the bleachers used by spectators). I believe those of us who travel to major events are responsible for traveling in the most sustainable way we can, and if we have to fly - I think verified carbon offsets are a good decision.
We'll continue to get better at climate mitigation as long as we keep raising its priority level in society - through governmental policy and voluntary action. We'll see what we can do!

Jason 'Great White' (Shark-Animal Rights Person) | March 26, 2008 9:45 AM PT

Even though I am a die-hard Football Fan, I am also a die-hard Environmentalist, and when the square off the good person in me always chooses the die-hard Environmentalist within me.

Just another big business company using carbon offsets and not making a complete commitment to get away with destroying our world. There is more to a sick world than just the positives of a world of less carbon involvement can solve. A complete commitment would have be proactive action of the owners coming together and passing rules that make every NFL event environmentally friendly/green.

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Meet the Greenwash Brigade

Our hand-picked environmental professionals, each part of the Public Insight Network, are on the hunt for "greenwash" as they examine eco-friendly claims by companies, governments and other groups. They ask tough questions about the mainstreaming of green, from the perspectives of people in the trenches who are focused on these issues 24/7.

Jim Nicolow

Jim Nicolow is a nationally recognized expert on sustainable design and leads the sustainability initiative for Lord, Aeck & Sargent, overseeing the incorporation of sustainable design strategies and features into the firm’s design projects. He is a LEED® Accredited Professional with extensive knowledge of the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) LEED rating system.

Janne K. Flisrand

Janne K. Flisrand has worked as an affordable housing and urban planning research consultant for five years, primarily supporting local non-profits. Her focus is on transit, transit-oriented design, affordable housing, and sustainability. Currently, she’s the program coordinator for Minnesota Green Communities, a program promoting affordable, healthy, sustainably built housing throughout Minnesota.

Dennis Markatos-Soriano

Dennis Markatos-Soriano recently completed a Master's in Public Affairs at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School. He is now launching Sustainable Energy Transition (SET) to help individuals and institutions move from dependence on oil and gas to an efficient use of renewables. Previously, he co-founded SURGE (Students United for a Responsible Global Environment), which aims to bring young progressives together across issues of environmental and social justice throughout North Carolina and beyond. In the summer of 2006, he helped to start a small green company, Greenway Pedicabs, to provide a greenhouse gas-free transportation option for people in the Triangle of North Carolina.

Heidi Siegelbaum

Heidi Siegelbaum is president of Siegelbaum & Associates, which specializes in science translation, cross-border indicators with Canada, cross-disciplinary planning and environmental technical assistance to businesses. Increasingly, her focus is on sustainable tourism and green hotels. Previously, she was in-house legal counsel for EPA for industrial chemicals and biotechnology and the senior performance measure analyst for the Washington State Department of Ecology. She is on the executive committee of the Northwest Natural Resource Group, which brokers FSC forest certification and landowner business services.

NOTE: The opinions expressed by the Greenwash Brigade bloggers and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not reflect the opinions of American Public Media or its employees. American Public Media is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by the Greenwash Brigade bloggers.

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