an NGO asks the IOC to “explore other solutions” for the surfing event

by time news

2023-12-09 15:29:57
The Teahupoo wave in Tahiti, August 15, 2023. JEROME BROUILLET / AFP

The surfing site designated for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games continues to cause a stir. Teahupoo’s Wave Pick “does not respect the interests and traditions of the indigenous and local Tahitians who live there”, denounces, Saturday December 9, the NGO Surfrider Foundation. The latter asked the International Olympic Committee (IOC) « d’explorer [d’autres options] that will protect the health and integrity of this unique marine ecosystem”.

For Surfrider Foundation, recent events must push the IOC to find “other solutions, including other competition venues” to replace that of Teahupoo. The latter, chosen in 2020 for its famous wave and its transparent waters, has for months been at the heart of tensions between the Polynesian government, the organizers of the Olympic Games and the local populations. The replacement of a wooden tower with an aluminum structure for the judges particularly focuses tensions.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Paris 2024: in Tahiti, the Olympic Games no longer know which wave to surf

During technical tests on December 1, filmed by environmental defense associations, a barge planned for the installation of this new tower broke coral, pushing the Polynesian government to pause the work. The decision was welcomed on Wednesday by the International Surfing Association (ISA).

“The credibility of current construction plans was undermined when an empty construction barge ran aground on the reef during a recent site visit”, estimates Surfrider Foundation. The initial project to install an aluminum tower to replace the wooden one – which was no longer up to standard, according to the organizers – had raised strong opposition, with associations believing that it risked degrading the seabed.

“No plan B”, according to Amélie Oudéa-Castéra

In mid-November, the organizers and the Polynesian government had therefore revised their copy with a project for a lighter tower in order to “limit damage to the environment as much as possible”. The Polynesian government decided to suspend work on the site after the barge test.

“We all regret this test which went poorly last week”said the president of the Paris 2024 organizing committee, Tony Estanguet, on Thursday. “Today, with the Polynesian government, we are trying to find new technical solutions to carry out this work while respecting the environment”he explained.

Read also: Paris 2024: the Polynesian president plans to move the surfing events from the Teahupoo site

A mea culpa also expressed by Amélie Oudéa-Castéra on Thursday. The Minister of Sports recognized that the test had not “obviously not well prepared and [qu’il] could not be conducted well. Unfortunately, he damaged pieces of coral. This is obviously entirely regrettable.”. Ms. Oudéa-Castéra, however, ruled out a relocation of the event.

“No, there is no plan B. We are on this path, which is really the right one, to have a new resized judges’ tower. Talks are intensifying at the local level, and we will have an exchange with the Polynesian authorities over the next week to try to get on track with this whole process.indicated the minister.

On Wednesday, the sites of Lacanau (Gironde) and La Torche (Finistère), former candidates for hosting the surfing events, declared that they were willing to host the event in the event that it could not be held in Tahiti.

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