Current:Home > InvestOlympics bet against climate change with swimming in Seine and may lose. Scientists say told you so -ProgressCapital
Olympics bet against climate change with swimming in Seine and may lose. Scientists say told you so
View
Date:2025-04-14 06:03:00
With plans for athletes to swim the Seine River through the heart of Paris, Olympic organizers essentially bet against climate change’s extreme weather. Now it’s looking like they’ll lose — by ditching the swimming portion of triathlon races.
And some scientists and engineers are saying told you so.
Heavy rains — something that’s increased with human-caused climate change, especially in Europe — running off from the urban environment have left the Seine too full of waste, including fecal matter, for athletes to compete. Unless E. coli levels fall to safe levels in coming days, a signature part of the Olympics will be washed out. So will an expensive facelift to the Parisian infrastructure that was designed to prevent the problem.
“They just gambled, flipped the coin and hope for a dry season and it turned out to be the rainiest in the last 30 years,” said Metin Duran, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Villanova University who has researched stormwater management. Organizers didn’t take climate change and its heavier rains into account, he said.
Organizers “had worked through most of the scenarios related to computer hacking and physical threats without fully assessing the implications of extreme events associated with climate,” said University of Arizona climate scientist Kathy Jacobs, who directs the Center for Climate Adaptation Science and Solutions. “It’s definitely time to take climate threats seriously.”
If any city could be expected to be mindful of the challenges of climate change, it’s Paris. It’s where the most significant climate agreement in history was struck almost a decade ago — to try to limit Earth’s warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels. And the Paris games aspire to have half the carbon footprint of earlier games held in London and Rio de Janeiro.
Paris, like many older cities around the world, has a combined sewer system, which means that the city’s wastewater and stormwater flow through the same pipes. With heavy or prolonged periods of rain, the pipes’ capacity is reached, sending raw wastewater into the river instead of a treatment plant.
Paris spent 1.4 billion euros ($1.5 billion) to improve the water quality in the Seine, including building a giant basin to capture excess rainwater and keep wastewater from entering the river, renovating sewer infrastructure and upgrading wastewater treatment plants.
But persistent rains, which dampened the opening ceremonies and temporarily gave way to a heat warning on Tuesday, have worked against all that. Tuesday’s men’s triathlon was postponed to Wednesday, when there’s more rain in the forecast. The city has had at least 80 rainy days in Paris so far this year, about two-and-a-half weeks more than normal, according to the French meteorological office.
An AP analysis of weather data found that Paris in 2024 had its second-highest number of rainy days since 1950, surpassed only by 2016. There’s been only one weeklong dry spell this year to give the drainage system a break. Normally there’s at least three by this time, the AP analysis shows.
“Heavy rainfall in the summer has always been a possibility and with a warming climate these heavy rainfall events have only become heavier, said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at the Imperial College of London. ”Thus, that definitely would need to have gone into the planning.”
A study last week in the journal Science found a noticeable global increase in the variability — the all-or-nothing quality — of rain and snow in the past 100 years with a big jump starting in 1960. Researchers then did the standard climate attribution analysis to compare what actually happened with what would have been expected in a fictional world without human-caused climate change. They found this increase in heavy rains punctuated by longer dry spells had global warming’s fingerprints on it.
The study also found three areas — Europe, eastern North America and Australia — had seen much higher jumps in the increase in rainfall extremes.
The laws of physics dictate that warmer air holds more moisture, which comes down as heavier rain, while climate change then changes weather patterns, making them more stuck in downpours or sunny days without clouds, said study co-author Peili Wu, a climate scientist at the United Kingdom Meteorological Office.
Organizers said what happened was beyond their control.
“Based on the data and normal rainfalls over the summer, we were really confident that with the contingency plans we have in place that all the triathlon events could take place fully,” Aurélie Merle, the Paris 2024 director of sports, told reporters Tuesday.
“We’re living in the 21st century where unfortunately there are far more meteorological events that happen that are beyond the control of the organizers,” Merle said. “We’ve seen in previous editions of triathlon competitions, some of the events have been moved to a duathlon because it’s complex. We’ve seen that we go from heavy rain to extreme heat like today in very few days. So it’s actually hard to control how it can affect the quality of a river.”
The underground storage basins “are the last thing any stormwater expert would suggest as a solution,” Duran said. Few cities use that solution any more because it’s limited and easily gets overwhelmed by the heavier and more frequent rains of climate change. It’s a solution for the era before global warming kicked in heavily, he said.
Duran said it’s not the only risk organizers underestimate. He pointed out that the acceptable pollution level for the triathlon is nearly four times weaker than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has for swimmable waterways. Paris’ mayor made a public show of swimming in the river earlier this month, something Duran called a publicity stunt. He said he would not swim in the Seine.
Future Olympics sites need to take a wetter world into consideration, Villanova’s Duran said: “The sewer overflow issue is bound to get worse until climate change is addressed.”
Los Angeles, the host city for the 2028 games, could learn a lesson and work toward more green spaces and fewer private vehicles, Imperial College’s Otto said.
“Olympic games are a great opportunity to change cities as for some reason people accept that athletes need to have a healthy environment whereas ordinary citizens should live within pollution, traffic, noise and risk their life and health,” Otto said.
___
Read more of AP’s climate coverage at http://www.apnews.com/climate-and-environment
___
Follow Seth Borenstein on X at @borenbears
______
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
veryGood! (55833)
Related
- Kansas City Chiefs CEO's Daughter Ava Hunt Hospitalized After Falling Down a Mountain
- Horoscopes Today, June 19, 2024
- Kylie Jenner cries over 'exhausting' comments saying she looks 'old'
- FBI raids homes in Oakland, California, including one belonging to the city’s mayor
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- Anchorage woman found dead in home after standoff with police, SWAT team
- Roller coaster strikes and critically injures man in restricted area of Ohio theme park
- Witnesses say Ohio man demanded Jeep before he stabbed couple at a Nebraska interstate rest area
- Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
- Alberto, hurricane season's first named storm, moves inland over Mexico
Ranking
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Freed Israeli hostage recounts ordeal in Gaza, where she says she was held in a hospital and civilian homes
- Lululemon's New Crossbody Bag Is Pretty in Pink & the Latest We Made Too Much Drops Are Stylish AF
- Argentina fans swarm team hotel in Atlanta to catch glimpse of Messi before Copa América
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Horoscopes Today, June 19, 2024
- TikTok unveils interactive Taylor Swift feature ahead of London Eras Tour shows
- Mass shooting in Philadelphia injures 7, including 1 critical; suspects sought
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Pennsylvania court will decide whether skill game terminals are gambling machines
2025 Honda Odyssey: Everything we know about the next minivan
New Lollapalooza documentary highlights festival's progressive cultural legacy
NCAA hits former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh with suspension, show-cause for recruiting violations
Donald Sutherland death: Chameleon character actor known for 'M*A*S*H' dead at 88
Cargo ship crew members can go home under agreement allowing questioning amid bridge collapse probes
Lauren Conrad Supports Husband William Tell's Reunion With Band Something Corporate