Tips for Events
You can reduce the environmental impact of your event with some careful planning.
Transport:
Transport is often the highest contributor to the carbon emissions of an event
- Consider venue location in organising your event – is it central / close to public transport?
- Encourage public transport use and / or car pooling – provide information about the public transport options on event information or tickets
- For large public events, employ a ‘spoke and hub’ system where participants park cars at various locations and are transported by bus to the central event location to save traffic and parking congestion
- Offer as optional or make compulsory the offsetting of the travel impact of the event, include it in the ticket price
Catering:
The catering options you choose can have varying degrees of impact on the amount of carbon emissions associated with your event
- Serve vegetarian meals where possible
- Make your meat options chicken, kangaroo and pork.Beef and lamb have a higher carbon emissions impact
- Plan the volume of food catering for the event carefully – enquire with experienced caterers and you may be able to reduce the amount of leftover food
- For beverages, opt for ones which have minimal packaging (eg. tap beer over bottled beer) and even choose carbon neutral beers and wines (sourced from the Low Carbon Economy!)
Electricity:
The power required to host your event has an environmental impact, particularly depending on the amount of power and it’s source.
- Reduce the electricity use at your event- talk with your venue manager on lighting and equipment
- Purchase Green Power for the unavoidable electricity used at your event
- Choose your venue according to its environmental credentials – it may already source Green Power, use energy efficient lighting and air conditioning; or like the Mercure Meetings Service, already offer carbon neutral events
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