Yachting
Journalists' Association Voices Concern Over Water Pollution At 2016 Olympic
Sailing Venue
The Yachting Journalists’ Association (YJA)
expresses extreme concern over the use of Guanabara Bay for the sailing events
of the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro next year. Despite continued protests
over the state of the pollution of the water since the site was first approved
in 2009, nothing has been achieved to limit or reduce the pollution in the bay
and this has now reached a significantly dangerous level as well as failing to
provide a level racetrack for the competitors.
Only a third of Rio de Janeiro’s sewage is treated, and
competitors in sailing events will need a series of innoculations.

Guanabara Bay surrounded by cities
In addition to the untreated faeces and urine from the
surrounding area, which is dumped into Guanabara Bay, Rio’s sewers deliver many
other foreign objects into the Bay – bodies of dead humans and animals plus
large items of rubbish, which are a hazard to the progress of small sailing
craft.
The Brazilian authorities promised the Bay would be cleared
for the sailing events as far back as 2009, but no effective work has been
carried out and the state of the Bay is now worse than it was.
There would appear to be a concerted recalcitrance by the
Rio authorities, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the
International Sailing Federation (ISAF) to tackle this problem, and with the
Sailing Events of the 2016 Olympic Games now only a year away, it would appear
that nothing will be done to improve the state of pollution in the waters where
the racing will take place. There are, after all, some 150 murders a day in the
Rio area – a figure that is not falling and shows no signs of so doing.
The high level of pollution is dangerous to the health of
all athletes racing on the Bay, and to the race officials and support
teams. In test events, competitors have hit semi-floating objects, which
have caught around centerboards and rudders, thereby making the racecourse
unfair.
Perhaps the only option would be to move the site of the
Olympic Regatta to Búzios – just 75 miles from Rio de Janeiro – where the
waters are clear and unpolluted. (Note: Weymouth, where the sailing
events of the last Olympic Games were held in 2012, is 136 miles from London. In
addition, there is a suitable marina at Buzios, which in six months could be
altered for the major event).
The Yachting Journalists’ Association strongly believes that
it needs, simply, action – NOW. It is time to abandon Guanabara Bay as the
venue and move it to a safe and clean water venue – IMMEDIATELY.
YJA Chairman Paul Gelder said: "It's astonishing that those in a position to solve the Rio Olympics
pollution scandal seem to have turned a blind eye and a deaf ear to multiple
protests, as well as irrefutable scientific evidence of toxic dangers. This
fiasco has been going on for months and our sailors face an unacceptable
risk."