Skip to content
Sat. Jan 10th, 2026
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Press Release Guidelines
  • Op-ed Guidelines
  • Indonesia
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Latest
  • News
  • Rilis
  • Brief
  • Interview
  • Opinion
  • Figure
  • Youth
  • SDGs
  • Topics
  • #LetterfromtheFounder
  • Membership Levels
  • Membership Account
  • Your Profile
  • Log In
  • Membership Account
  • Your Profile
  • Membership Levels
  • Membership Invoice
  • Membership Billing
  • public-menu
    • NewsInformative and light. Bringing you stories from events, developments, innovations, policies, programs, good practices, reports, research findings, conferences, and movements in governments, businesses, and civil society in the Asia Pacific and beyond through evergreen soft news.
    • Rilis
  • Home
  • Featured
  • The Tokyo 2020 Olympics Bubble (1): Sustainability in Design
  • Featured
  • News

The Tokyo 2020 Olympics Bubble (1): Sustainability in Design

Japan has set the sustainability concept of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics as "Be better, together—For the planet and the people".
by Nazalea Kusuma 4 years ago 3 min read

Photo: France Olympique

Spread the love

The Tokyo 2020 Olympics is happening, and it claims to be the most sustainable Olympics so far. This massive sporting event is happening despite polling in May that revealed that 83% of the Japanese population were against the Olympics happening this summer. The Tokyo 2020 Olympics seems to be happening inside a very green, very safe bubble.

Japan has set the sustainability concept of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics as “Be better, together—For the planet and the people”. They will take the initiative to meet its responsibility to deliver sustainable games and showcase solution models of global sustainability challenges to people in Japan and around the world.

With five main sustainability themes and the addition of the Tokyo 2020 Sustainable Sourcing Code to ensure sustainability throughout the supply chains, Tokyo 2020 shows a start to a more sustainable Olympics.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Tokyo 2020 (@tokyo2020)

On the zero-waste front, key elements of the Games are made from recycled materials. The single beds within the Olympics Village are made from cardboard. Everything is to be recycled afterward, including the mattresses.

The uniforms for the torchbearers were designed by Daisuke Obana and made from recycled plastic bottles of Coca-Cola. The medals are made using recovered precious metals from e-waste. The podiums athletes will stand on are made from recycled plastic waste and will be repurposed afterward, produced by Procter & Gamble, the No. 7 plastic polluter of 2020, according to Green Matters.

Fom left to right: Silver,Gold, and Coppermedals of Tokyo 2020 Olympics
The medals of Tokyo 2020 Olympics | Photo: Olympics

The Olympic torches, designed by Tokujin Yoshioka, were made from recycled construction waste from temporary housing used in the aftermath of the 2011 Fukushima earthquake and tsunami. The relay torches and cauldrons holding the Olympic and Paralympic flames are fueled by clean hydrogen from the Fukushima solar plant, which is also used to run the Olympic Village.

Instead of building all brand-new venues to facilitate the Games, the Tokyo 2020 Olympics uses only eight newly built venues from scratch using sustainably sourced timber, ten temporary structures, and 25 already-existing venues. These structures will later be repurposed into Japan’s first hydrogen-powered town with schools, apartments, shops, and other facilities.

The Games is using as much renewable energy as possible. Transport within the Olympic Village is taken care of using a fleet of mostly electric or hybrid emission-free vehicles by Toyota. The Olympic Committee has plans for an “Olympic Forest”, consisting of 355,000 native trees in Mali and Senegal to protect the area from desertification.

Masako Konishi, a member of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics sustainability committee and the climate and energy project leader at World Wildlife Fund Japan, has told NPR that the Olympic organizers have collected 150% of the carbon credits needed to offset the Games’ greenhouse gas emissions, making the Olympics carbon negative.

Editor: Marlis Afridah

Read the follow-up article on the Tokyo 2020 Olympics Bubble (2): Sustainability Criticisms and COVID-19.

Spread the love
Nazalea Kusuma
Managing Editor at Green Network Asia | Website |  + postsBio

Naz adalah Manajer Publikasi Digital Internasional di Green Network Asia. Ia pernah belajar Ilmu Perencanaan Wilayah dan Kota dan tinggal di beberapa kota di Asia Tenggara. Pengalaman pribadi ini memperkaya persepektifnya akan masyarakat dan budaya yang beragam. Naz memiliki sekitar satu dekade pengalaman profesional sebagai penulis, editor, penerjemah, dan desainer kreatif.

  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    5 Food System Actors That Have Taken the 123 Pledge to Reduce Food Loss & Waste
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    The Potential and Power of K-pop Fandoms as Global Communities
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Lebanon’s Education Crisis Is Not Getting Better
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Reviving Kazakhstan’s Prehistoric Ecosystems, the Golden Steppe
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Dugongs & Friends: Abu Dhabi’s Marine and Coastal Restoration Efforts
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Glass Onion: Layers of Hydrogen Energy
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Three Tips for a More Sustainable Gift-Giving
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    How Schools Can Bring Change with Sustainability Education and Program
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Balancing Human Rights and Climate Change

Continue Reading

Previous: Maginhawa Community Pantry in the Philippines: A New Hope
Next: The Tokyo 2020 Olympics Bubble (2): Sustainability Criticisms and COVID-19

Related Stories

Test Custom Feature Image 1 min read
  • News

Test Custom Feature Image

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 3 months ago
a blue roam rapid mass transit bus Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya 1 min read
  • Featured
  • News

Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya

by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago
a collage of four photos showing FedEx volunteers in the middle of beach clean-up activities. FedEx Engages Employees with Beach Clean-Up Initiative 3 min read
  • News

FedEx Engages Employees with Beach Clean-Up Initiative

by Kresentia Madina 3 years ago
a hand pointing a pencil at charts titled “Finance Review” plastered on a whiteboard Come Back Stronger: Building Philippines’ Resilient Economy Post-COVID-19 3 min read
  • Featured
  • News

Come Back Stronger: Building Philippines’ Resilient Economy Post-COVID-19

by Kresentia Madina 3 years ago
Abigail Lovell, Chief Sustainability Officer of Experian. Inside Experian’s Sustainability Journey: An Interview with Chief Sustainability Officer Abigail Lovell 7 min read
  • Featured
  • Interview

Inside Experian’s Sustainability Journey: An Interview with Chief Sustainability Officer Abigail Lovell

by Marlis Afridah 3 years ago
overhead view of fruit peels and other food scraps in a plastic bag 5 Food System Actors That Have Taken the 123 Pledge to Reduce Food Loss & Waste 3 min read
  • News

5 Food System Actors That Have Taken the 123 Pledge to Reduce Food Loss & Waste

by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago

You may have missed

Test Custom Feature Image 1 min read
  • News

Test Custom Feature Image

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 3 months ago
a quite large body of water covered with yellow algae under blue skies Test premium post 1 min read
  • Brief

Test premium post

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 2 years ago
Test Artikel Free 2 min read
  • Rilis

Test Artikel Free

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 2 years ago
a blue roam rapid mass transit bus Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya 1 min read
  • Featured
  • News

Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya

by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
  • Pinterest
  • Telegram
  • Etsy
  • Tokopedia
  • Media Link 11
  • Media Link 12
  • Media Link 13
  • Media Link 14
  • Media Link 15
Copyright © All rights reserved.