London 2012: retired police called in to guard Olympic Games - Daily Telegraph London 2012: retired police called in to guard Olympic Games - Daily Telegraph
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London 2012: retired police called in to guard Olympic Games - Daily Telegraph

London 2012: retired police called in to guard Olympic Games - Daily Telegraph

He said the firm sounded "desperate" when they got in touch.

Since awarding G4S the contract, the London Olympic Organising Committee (Locog) had to amend its deal with the company after the number of security guards needed increased from 10,000 to 23,700.

The firm said: "The security operation is gradually building in the lead up to the Games and we are increasing the security workforce deployment numbers in line with this programme.

"We have had some challenges on workforce scheduling this week, which we have discussed with Locog and other stakeholders."

Brigadier Alister Davis, a former British Army commander in Afghanistan, has been in charge of training the guards over a period of nine months.

He admitted it was a "tall order" and said: "Some things are simpler in the desert."



London Olympics in charts: from medals to competitors, how do the 1908, 1948 and 2012 games compare? - The Guardian

London will be the first city ever to have hosted three Olympics this summer. In 1908, at the height of the British empire, it was a last-minute choice, stepping in for Rome after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. In 1948, Germany and Japan were banned following their wartime defeat, the Soviet Union was absent and this was the 'austerity Olympics' in a broke country. So, how does 2012 compare?

The House of Commons Library, the team which usually supplies MPs with the answers to tricky research questions, is publishing the ultimate statistical guide to how Britain, London and the Olympic games themselves have changed. Olympic Britain, out today, charts how the world the Olympians of 1908 knew would seem unrecogniseable today. And how we got there.

1908 Olympic fencing poster 1908 Olympic fencing poster

They have also given us the key data behind the book for you to download. There are loads of caveats and nuances the data has had to take account of. Not least there's the fact that many of the countries and areas of 1908 do not exist now - remember Bohemia, anyone?  And, although all of this data is in theory publicly available, it's pretty tricky to get hold of. There is so much here, we have split it into three parts and extracted the key information from the data for: the Olympics, Britain and London.

This is part one.

Who was at the games?

Olympic participants interactive Olympic participants interactive map: click image to see it

In 1908, the first modern Olympics of 1896 were still a live memory, and this was quite a different world. The majority of the competitors came from the imperial empires of Britain, Russia, Germany, the Austro-Hungarians and France, plus the new power: America. The five rings of the Olympic symbol weren't invented until Baron Pierre De Coubertin presented it to the world in 1914.

Although the colonies were allowed to participate, it was hardly encouraged for fear it would lead to national identity and undermine their European masters. Two indigenous Africans from South Africa had been allowed to compete in the St Louis games of 1904, featuring in 'athletic games for savages', although they were allowed to enter the marathon, finishing ninth and twelfth out of 36. It wasn't until 1952 that any other sub Saharan country participated, Ghana, although it didn't win a medal until Clement Quartey won a boxing silver in 1960.

Africa is still under-represented in the modern games, despite the fact that African athletes regularly far outperform their western rivals in terms of medals.

How have the records changed?

How fast is fast? In 1908, the 100m was run in 10.8 seconds. Usain Bolt's record now stands at 9.69 seconds, which is over 23mph.

As the Commons researchers point out:

The winner of the men's 5,000m in Beijing 2008 ran at a pace that would have won the 1,500m in 1908, while the winner of the women's marathon would have won the 1908 men's race by half an hour

There are lots of reasons for this recent increase, not least:
• Following both world wars, casualties and interrupted training regimes meant few records were broken
• Boycotts by the USSR in 1984 and the US in 1980
• The high altitude games in Mexico City in 1968 led to a "slew of [Olympic] new short-distance records" - including the long jump record of 8.9m which still stands

Before the last war, the vast majority of records were set by athletes in their home countries, now - with simpler world travel - that figure is less than 25%.

How many women, and how many sports?

The athletes of 2012 will be competing in many more events this time around, even though the IOC has declared a maximum of 28 sports should be played. This year there will be 302 events in 26 sports, up from 110 events in 21 sports in 1908.

Some sports have been dropped, including tug of war - in which Britain won all three podium places in 1908, with the City of London police team winning gold, cricket, lacrosse and croquet were also contested. In 1908, rugby union was also part of the lineup. Scotland and Ireland refused to take part and the French withdrew, leaving Cornwall to play Australasia. The book has found the official report

The Olympic report was stoical about the result of a game played in a thick London fog at a deserted White City Stadium: 'as was natural, the Cornishmen were defeated … by 32 points to 3.'

Now that women's boxing has been added for the London games, there are now no sports where they can not compete. Although the majority of athletes in London will still be men, the games are much more evenly balanced than they were.

Britain's performance

This year, Britain's Olympic Association is trying to manage expectations: fourth place in the medal rankings is an "aspirational target". At one time, it actually happened - in 1908, when it scooped 56 gold medals.

That was the high point - although the performance in Beijing was a record too

• Highest proportion of golds - 6% - since 1924
• Highest amount per 10 million population (3.1) since 1920
• Highest per £100bn GDP since 1952

The full data is below. What can you do with it?

Data summary

British Olympic golds

Click heading to sort table. Download this data

2008 Beijing 19 3.09 6.3
2004 Athens 9 1.50 3
2000 Sydney 11 1.87 3.7
1996 Atlanta 1 0.17 0.4
1992 Barcelona 5 0.87 1.9
1988 Seoul 5 0.88 2.1
1984 Los Angeles 5 0.89 2.2
1980 Moscow 5 0.89 2.5
1976 Montreal 3 0.53 1.5
1972 Munich 4 0.71 2.1
1968 Mexico City 5 0.91 2.9
1964 Tokyo 4 0.74 2.5
1960 Rome 2 0.38 1.3
1956 Melbourne 6 1.17 3.9
1952 Helsinki 1 0.20 0.7
1948 London 3 0.60 2.2
1936 Berlin 4 0.85 3.1
1932 Los Angeles 4 0.86 3.4
1928 Amsterdam 3 0.66 2.7
1924 Paris 9 2.00 7.1
1920 Antwerp 15 3.41 9.6
1912 Stockholm 10 2.38 9.7
1908 London 56 13.31 50.9
1904 St. Louis 1 0.26 1
1900 Paris 15 3.92 16.7
1896 Athens 2   4.7

Download the data

DATA: download the full spreadsheet
SOURCES: download the details for the original data

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London raises bar on greening the Games - Reuters UK

LONDON | Tue Jul 10, 2012 10:41am BST

LONDON (Reuters) - A reed warbler sings from her nest, well hidden along the banks of a river that winds through a London park.

But this is not just any urban refuge - it's the Olympic Park, in a once derelict and contaminated area of east London populated by industrial buildings and neglected waterways.

And in just a few weeks' time, millions will watch the greatest Games on Earth in the warbler's backyard.

More than 200 hectares of land have been razed and redeveloped for the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, and 45 of those have been given over to creating new wildlife habitats for a variety of fauna - including kingfishers, bats, otters and grass snakes - while much of the rest has been left as parkland.

The urban park project is one of Europe's biggest in 150 years, according to the Olympic Development Authority (ODA) and the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG), and is part of ODA's efforts to keep its promise to make the Games the greenest to date.

Thousands of semi-mature trees were planted - aspen, crack willow, holm oak and silver birch - as were hundreds of thousands of wetland plants and other species, and more than 10 hectares of annual and perennial meadows.

An independent commission appointed to review the results, the first commission of its kind, says the outcome has been impressive when compared to previous hosts Beijing, Athens and Sydney, though not everything has worked.

"You only win a gold medal by being better than everyone else," said Shaun McCarthy, chair of the Commission for a Sustainable London 2012, but added: "I can very confidently say that this is the new high-water mark."

Simon Lewis, a campaigner at environmental group WWF UK, agreed London would provide a sustainability blueprint for Olympic Games for years to come.

But he also said progress on putting concern for the environment at the heart of the Olympic movement has been slow.

"It is evolutionary rather than revolutionary," Lewis told Reuters.

TARGETS

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) encourages host cities to address how they will handle the environmental impact of the Games in their planning, but does not insist on targets - Sydney 2000, Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008 all had environmental plans whose ambition varied widely.

"London 2012 embedded sustainability in its planning from the start," said Emmanuelle Moreau, an IOC spokesman.

The ODA matched or beat most of its sustainable development targets, such as those for carbon emissions, waste and energy efficiency, the independent commission said in a June report.

One target promised a 50 percent reduction in carbon emissions from construction in the Olympic Park compared to levels set out in 2006 building regulations.

Others called for permanent buildings to be at least 15 percent more energy efficient, and for at least 90 percent of demolition waste to be reused or recycled.

Some 2 million tonnes of the area's soil was cleaned on site to remove contaminates such as oil, petrol, tar, arsenic and lead, while London's Velodrome is twice as energy-efficient as it needed to be.

It used half the materials used to build the one in Beijing and also came in comfortably under budget, evidence that greener projects do not need to come with a higher price tag, said McCarthy.

"For me treating sustainability like some sort of premium product, like a pair of designer jeans, is the completely wrong way to look at it," McCarthy added.

Many of the venues, bridges and structures to accommodate an expected 11 million visitors to the London Games can be disassembled, downsized and relocated afterwards.

The IOC's Moreau said a commitment to sustainable development, which gives equal weight to economic growth, the environment and social issues, will continue to be a key requirement in selecting host cities in future.

Rio is already working on ways to cut traffic congestion and reduce emissions ahead of the 2016 Games, and its sustainability team has been in contact with London.

But environmentalists say the IOC should set higher standards and require all future host cities to take on measurable targets. Until that happens, London - they say - is likely to remain the green benchmark by default.

"There is absolutely no reason why the IOC shouldn't be demanding the highest possible standards," McCarthy said.

NOT ALL SUCCESS

London's efforts haven't all been successful.

The organisers failed to generate 20 percent of the park's energy needs from renewable sources after planners pulled the plug on a large wind turbine and opted for a combined heat-and-power plant fuelled by natural gas instead.

But they still managed to meet the overall 50 percent emissions reduction goal by agreeing to help fund the London Mayor's low-carbon scheme for schools and homes in the communities.

However, the WWF UK's Lewis said London organisers should have done a better job selecting their "sustainability" partners.

"Some of the Olympic sponsors have not used the Games to create a positive change for sustainability and therefore they are not adding to the legacy, they are not helping the Games be greener," he said.

WWF reckons a good Olympic partner should be a progressive business that shows green leadership in their sector and that breaks new ground in reducing the impact of the Games while applying sustainability pledges to their business afterwards.

Lewis cited EDF Energy and oil giant BP as examples of companies that could have done more.

"EDF and BP are sticking with old and problematic approaches to energy provision and resisting a safer, cleaner and more affordable energy future," he wrote in a blog in April. "They are dragging their heels at the back of the race to tackle climate change."

Sheila Williams, a spokeswoman for BP, denied the company was not providing leadership. She pointed to BP plans to offset the carbon footprints of all ticketed spectators' travel to the Games, which it has estimated at around 400,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions, as an example of a BP initiative.

The company is also providing biofuels and cleaner engine oils to be used in the more than 5,000 official vehicles earmarked for the Games, she said.

Michael Stuart, an EDF Energy spokesman, conceded his company was unable to deliver a promised low-carbon fuel for the Olympic torch in time for London, but said it had successfully developed the fuel - derived from elephant grass - and that it would be available for future Games.

"Without the inspiration of the Games, this fuel would not have been developed," Stuart said in an email.

EDF is also installing real-time energy monitoring technology to help control and reduce energy use at Olympic venues, he added.

LEGACY

Ultimately, London's success will be judged on its ability to deliver a lasting environmental legacy - decades from now, the organisers hope to see a permanent improvement to the area around the venues.

Once the Games are over in mid-August, the Olympic facilities will be turned over to the non-profit London Legacy Development Corp, renamed the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, and opened to the public in phases from the summer of 2013.

David Stubbs, LOCOG's head of sustainability and himself an avid bird watcher, said a variety of birds had been observed over the last couple of seasons since the new parklands were planted, including sand martins, grey wagtails, linnets and kestrels.

In the winter, a flock of some 50 teals took up residence, and the river corridor has also attracted cormorants, herons, little grebes, mute swans and coots, Stubbs said.

More than 500 bird boxes, 150 bat boxes and artificial dens for otters have been installed in the park that officials hope will see regular use.

Kim Olliver, an ecologist and environment manager with the ODA, said she hoped visitors and athletes would take time out from the excitement of the sporting events to relax by the river and listen to the reed warblers.

"They might see a kestrel hovering over," she said.

(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Andrew Osborn)



London 2012: Stonehenge lit up with fire sculptures for festival - BBC News

Stonehenge is due to be transformed into a "glowing fairytale environment" to mark the London 2012 Olympic Games.

As the sun sets later, the World Heritage site will be lit up with fire sculptures, candle-lit paths and the ancient stones illuminated.

The "Fire Garden", which runs for three consecutive nights, has been created by French arts group Compagnie Carabosse.

The event is part of London 2012 Festival, a three-month cultural celebration.

Organised by the Salisbury International Arts Festival, the "atmospheric feast for the senses" will include "mysterious fiery engines", flaming fire pots and "cascades of candles".

The arts group, which has staged installations across Europe, said visitors would "pass between concentric circles of flames" and "huge fire balls".

"They have been setting up since Friday," said Maria Bota, the festival's director.

"And they have responded to the site and created this especially for Stonehenge.

"They've incorporated the points of the compass, the shadows on the stones and the sense of many souls departing - its going to be spectacular."

Stonehenge is part of the National Heritage Collection and is in the care of English Heritage.

Simon Thurley, chief executive of English Heritage, said: "Stonehenge has been a place of celebration for thousands of years so it is fitting that it plays a role in this major cultural celebration.

"Fire Garden promises to be a beautiful and unique artistic endeavour within an iconic world heritage site."

The Fire Garden will run from 10-12 July, from 21:00 BST until midnight, with last admission at 23:30 BST.



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