Tokyo 2020 Olympic Sailing Competition
The Tokyo 2020 Olympic Sailing Competition will see 350 athletes from 65 nations race across the ten Olympic disciplines. Enoshima Yacht Harbour, the host venue of the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Sailing Competition, will once again welcome sailors from 25 July to 4 August 2021. 21 July, 2021 © Sailing Energy / World Sailing

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Japan’s Ocean Day highlights importance of ocean conservation

Ahead of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony, Japan’s Ocean Day is being celebrated across the nation on Thursday 22 July.

The day marks the return of Emperor Meiji from a steamship trip to the Tohoku Region of Japan (located in the northeast of the country) in 1876. It has been declared a national bank holiday to “express gratitude for the blessings of the sea and wish prosperity for the oceanic country of Japan.”

In 2017 World Sailing launched Sustainability Agenda 2030, setting out the world governing body’s ambitious commitment to help create a better world through sport. Aligned with the United Nation’s Sustainability Development Goals, Sustainability Agenda 2030 has enabled significant changes within the sport across grassroots sailing clubs to the top tier of the sport.

Click here for more information on Sustainability Agenda 2030.

At the Olympic Sailing Competition, the 350 sailors from 65 nations know the importance of ensuring a sustainable future for the sport and are ambassadors for protection of the world’s waterways.

Great Britain’s Hannah Mills boasts London 2012 silver and Rio 2016 gold Olympic medals. She is one of the most successful sailors at Tokyo 2020 and has made it her mission to promote and deliver sustainability initiatives for the benefit of sport and future generations of sports men and women.

Click here to hear more from Hannah.

“Protecting and preserving the world’s waterways, the oceans, rivers, lakes, dams, everything is incredibly important,” commented Mills. “The ocean in particular sustains all of us. It sustains all life on Earth and produces 50% of the oxygen we breathe and it’s a massive carbon sink. So, all that CO2 we’re producing, it absorbs a lot of it, but it’s struggling, and our actions are essentially killing it. And without the ocean, we won’t be here. So what more is that to say? It is it’s imperative to human life.”

Mills has used her voice and profile to raise awareness and in 2019 she launched the Big Plastic Pledge which is targeted at individuals within the sporting world and asking them to take action and unite to tackle single use plastic in sport.

That message is as strong as ever, and Ocean Day in Japan is just one of many opportunities to raise awareness on this important subject.

Mills continued, “I think sport has a huge role to play in terms of accelerating the change we need to combat climate change. And I think sailing is really well positioned to do that through ocean racing to inshore racing at the Olympics.

“I think the one major thing at this Olympic Games for me is about athletes using their voice to highlight these global challenges we’re facing. The Olympics is an incredible platform. We’re going to be speaking to media every single day so just getting that message out there a bit more and encouraging more people to start their journey in terms of understanding the sustainability challenges would be an amazing thing.”

World Sailing Sustainability

World Sailing’s Sustainability Agenda 2030 outlines how the sport will contribute to the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals. The Sustainability Agenda 2030 is split up into World Sailing’s six main operational areas with a total of 56 different targets. The targets range from participation to gender equality, water quality to single use plastic.

Supported by the International Olympic Committee and World Sailing’s partners, delivery of the Sustainability Agenda 2030 will be ongoing with various timeframes for achievement of the targets.

As part of World Sailing’s Sustainability Agenda 2030, World Sailing celebrates those within the marine community who make a significant contribution with a yearly 11th Hour Racing Sustainability Award.

First presented in 2018, the Award celebrates the effective execution or ongoing delivery of high-impact, highly replicable initiatives aligned to World Sailing’s Sustainability Agenda 2030.

Nominations are now open, click here for more information.

By Daniel Smith – World Sailing