The Legacy and Sustainability plan for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games — 125 Other stakeholders • The residents of host regions, through meetings and workshops organised by Paris 2024 and local authorities • SSE companies involved by way of Les Canaux • The disability sector, particularly through the French advisory board for people with disabilities (CNCPH) as well as through meetings throughout the country • Public, semi-public and private bodies and associations behind the environmental transformation, such as the French Agency for the Ecological Transition (ADEME), WWF France, PEXE, the International Energy Agency (IEA), the French league for the protection of birds (LPO) and the French environmental federation France Nature Environnement • Organisers of major sporting events and operators of sports facilities • Local authorities, particularly through representative associations and urban networks that have committed to promote physical activity and sport • The World Health Organization (WHO), the OECD, the IEA, the UNFCCC, the Commonwealth Secretariat, UNESCO, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) as well as other international organisations Appendix 2 – The main stakeholder legacy plans Making the Paris 2024 Games and their legacy a success The French National Olympic and Sports Committee (CNOSF) Organising the Games creates an exceptional set of circumstances, which is why the sporting movement aims to make sport a central component of a society-wide endeavour. This ambition involves people giving themselves the means to take very concrete action to build the legacy that the Games will leave behind for both the sporting world and society as a whole, as sport can change lives. Take a look at the CNOSF legacy plan • An ambitious legacy for the Paris 2024 Games The French Paralympic and Sports Committee (CPSF) The French Paralympic and Sports Committee (CPSF) France will be hosting its first-ever Paralympic Games from 28 August to 8 September 2024. With 22 sports, 23 disciplines and 4,350 athletes, Paris 2024 aims to make the competition a unique event; for instance, it became the first organising committee to choose a single emblem for both the Olympic and Paralympic Games. The Paris 2024 Paralympic Games are already an inspiration and must help fuel people’s dreams. Launched in March 2019 by the French Paralympic and Sports Committee in collaboration with all Paralympic federations, the “Relève” programme drew a highly positive response as 660 people signed up and 180 people – 40% of whom were women – took part in six scouting tests. Take a look at the CPSF legacy plan and its manifesto •
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