Open response from FIS President to Greenpeace

By Published On: April 28th, 2023Comments Off on Open response from FIS President to Greenpeace

Press release and photo provided by FIS

Open response from FIS President Johan Eliasch to Greenpeace letter dated 24 April 2023:

Dear Mr Christensen,

Thank you for your letter. Let me respond, first with something we can agree on. The climate crisis is unfolding rapidly and causing devastation to millions. Its impact on the environment that skiing and snowboarding depend on is a consequence particularly close to our hearts. Climate change presents an existential threat to our sports, and threatens far, far worse impacts on hundreds of millions of people around the world.

That is why FIS put together a plan to be climate positive. Cuts to emissions must start at home. FIS will continue to take strenuous action to reduce its footprint. But responsible organizations must seek to make changes beyond reducing their own emissions. As they do, they should recognize a simple fact: the effects of the crisis are already being felt in communities whose environments are devastated by extreme weather.

Indigenous people and local communities who live in rainforests are in a unique position. Though they often suffer the effects of drought, typhoons, habitat desiccation and species loss, they also have an unrivaled record of conserving the forest they live in.

This is why – in addition to reducing its own footprint – FIS is committed to being climate positive by directly supporting indigenous communities in Peru. Cool Earth is the NGO we have chosen to partner with because they help to put local people in control of their forest and stick by their promises to indigenous communities. They are an organization that has never treated the beliefs and the land of indigenous people with contempt.

We are proud that FIS is able to describe itself as climate positive. We do not simply buy and retire carbon credits; instead we are following the UN’s guidance to go further and faster in taking action.

Your letter also suggests that our work on sustainability begins and ends with supporting rainforest communities. This is not the case. As signatories to the UN Sports for Climate Action Framework, we have set ourselves the goal of halving our carbon footprint by 2030, an aim which will force us to keep striving to make our activities more sustainable.

The 2023 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Slovenia was a great example of what can be achieved, with energy-self-sufficient buildings and spectators incentivized to walk or cycle. We are determined that all our events must aim for such high standards, and soon. That is why we are creating the toolkit for our member federations and the reward program to recognize FIS Organizers that make the biggest strides in reducing their carbon footprint.

Climate protection is a cause I have been personally passionate about for thirty years. Progress will be made through practical actions that are rooted in climate justice and research on what works. Let me repeat: I share your anxieties about the effect that climate change is having – and will have – on us all. I am determined that we at FIS will do our part to help avert climate disaster.  Equally, Greenpeace should do its part in engaging constructively in an educated and fact-based manner with those seeking to affect genuine change and respecting the rights of indigenous people.

Please be assured that we remain fully committed to our mission to make snow sports the most sustainable sport on earth.

Kind regards,
Johan Eliasch
FIS President

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