Tag Archives: greener festival award

Our Award winners pick up their green ‘flags’ !

Luke,  Helen and Claire from A Greener Festival, Matt, Max and Steve from Robertson Taylor, and festival organisers from Cambridge Folk Festival, Greenbelt, Hadra Trance Festival, Festibelly, T-in-the-Park, Wood, The Isle of Wight Festival and Shambala, pick up their ‘flag’ awards at the UK Festival Conference 2011 at the Forum, London. Good times!

Shambala won the overall UK ‘Greener Festival Award’ at the UK Festival Awards that evening at the Camden Roundhouse – and Chris from Shambala is kneeling down holding that Award. Well done to them!

The Greener Festival Awards are generously supported by

Our eco-friendly and recycled tent award  ’Flags’ were designed by Helen and printed by http://www.idressmyself.co.uk/

THE GREENER FESTIVAL AWARD 2010 – THE WINNERS

A further sixteen UK, North American and European festivals have been named as winners of the prestigious Greener Festival Award 2010 making a record breaking total of 47 winners in 2010.  The new winners include Bonnaroo (USA). Lightning in a Bottle (USA), West Beach (USA),  Osheaga Festival (Canada), Outside Lands (USA), Shambala Festival (Northants), End of the Road (Wiltshire), Waveform (Norfolk), Bestival (Isle of Wight), Camp Bestival (Lulworth), The Co-operative Cambridge Folk Festival, Hard Rock Calling (London), T-in-the-Park (Scotland), Big Tent (Scotland), Boom (Portugal) and  Welcome to the Future (Netherlands).

The final winners for 2010 are:

 

 

Outstanding

Big Tent (Scotland)

Croissant Neuf Summer Party (England)

Boom (Portugal)

Isle of Wight Festival (England)

Lightning in a Bottle (USA)

Osheaga (Canada)

Oya Festival (Norway)

Peats Ridge (Australia)

Shambala (England)

Sunrise Summer Celebration (England)

Wood  Festival (England)

Commended (and *Highly Commended)

Bestival*  (England)

Big Session Weekend (England)

Bonnaroo* (USA)

Bristol Harbour Festival (England)

Camp Bestival (England)

Co-operative Cambridge Folk Festival (England)

Falls Festival (Australia) ~

The Glastonbury Festival* (England)

Grassroots* (Jersey)

Hard Rock Calling (England)

Hadra Trance Festival (France)

Island Vibe (Australia)

Lounge on the Farm (England)

Malmo Festivalen* (Sweden)

Open Air Festival (Czech Republic)

OpenAir St Gallen (Switzerland)

Outside Lands (USA)

Rototom Sunsplash (Spain)

SOS 4:8*  (Spain)

Southbound (Australia)

Summer Sundae Weekender

T-in-the-Park* (Scotland)

Waveform* (England)

Womadelaide (Australia)

Wireless (England)

West Beach (USA)

Improving

Byron Bay Blues + (Australia)

City of London Festival (England)

End of the Road (England)

Fairbridge (Australia)

Rock For People (Czech Republic)

Sonisphere (England)

Splendour Festival (England)

Standon Calling (England)

Westcoast Blues (Australia)

Welcome to the Future (Netherlands)

two sites

 + new site in 2010

LETTER FOR THE BOOMERS!

This is a newsletter from the fabulous BOOM festival and looks at the ecological commitment at Boom and gives some further explanations about this year’s festival to fellow Boomers – and readers of this Blog.

Photo 1
Perspective of The Drop


MATERIALS: THE BASIC INGREDIENTS FOR A BEAUTIFUL BOOM –
Reuse, Recycle and Reduce: For the second time we did a partnership with one huge festival in Portugal – Rock In Rio Lisbon – to recycle their rubbish and materials.
We went there to get timber, flooring, metals, plastics and some other materials.

Boom reused 86,475kg of materials thus avoiding overconsumption of resources for the construction of our festival. According to the tool IWM -2 (Integrated Waste Management Model 2), developed by the Lisbon University IST, we avoided the emission of 254,000 kg of CO2 with this initiative.

Some other facts: 90% of the Healing Area, for instance, was done with reused materials. 80% of Groovy Beach was made of recycled pallets. 100% of Golden Shack Pagoda and Gamelatron was done with recycling of rubbish. 100% of restaurants cover made of recycled lycra.

Here is the table of materials we reused from that event only:

  • Iron: 195kg
  • Wood: 46,700kg
  • Synthetic grass and flooring: 39,310kg
  • Linoleum: 100kg
  • Vinyl: 100kg
  • Acrylic: 70 kg

Bioconstruction: Dow Tow was done with local resources: cane and clay. Dance Temple and The Drop was built with bamboo taken from forests monitored under sustainable standards (both in Portugal and abroad). The Communitarian Kitchen was done by volunteers (thanks guys!) using super adobe and clay.

Ferrocement: We built both the water treatment unit ‘STAR’ with the social technology ferrocement and a water tank of 240,000 lt. Ferrocement is an economical technique based on cement, sand, water and chicken wire.

Photo 2
Golden Shack Pagoda and Gamelatron – Made entirely with recycled rubbish


ENERGY: NOTHING IS POSSIBLE WITHOUT IT

In 2008, Boom Environmental Program launched “Your Oil Is Music” (we collected waste vegetable oil for generators). This year we went further on the realm of energy and we founded the Boom Lab.

Boom Lab Facts: 

  • We built 3 small mobile photovoltaic stations with 6 panels of 80 watts each. They were used for the offices of areas such as production, Sacred Fire, Healing Area and Ambient Paradise. They generated 2.4 kilowatts/hour per day.
  • The 4th solar station produced at Boom Lab had an output of 3.2 kilowatts/hour per day from solar energy.

Boom Lab also developed a bigger station that was placed near the logistics and main workshops. Two mobile trackers were based on 12 panels each and followed the tilt of the sun producing 13 kilowatts/hour per day.

More facts about energy and Boom:

  • Boom’s vehicles (one truck, two vans) run on waste vegetable oil.
  • We have one generator that runs on waste vegetable oil.
  • We used 15,000lt of waste vegetable oil.

Download here the “Our Ecommitment” feature published on Boom’s journal “Dharma Dragon” in PDF format.

Photo 3
Boom Lab’s Solar Tracker Station
 


WATER: EVERY DROP COUNTS

Water was the theme of Boom 2010 and we developed a system for water treatment onsite, showcasing technologies that are useful for human communities.

  • All grey water from restaurants and showers was treated onsite and recycled for irrigation.
  • We built a water treatment unit we called ‘STAR’. The system was based on bio-remediation and evapotranspiration. With this unit we achieved the goal of treating 100% of all waste water at Boom.
  • Total waste water generated: Restaurants – 300 mil litres. Showers 2,5 million litres.
  • Total water treated and recycled at the festival: 100% of waste water.
  • One kilometre of infiltrating channels were constructed for the shower´s water. This track is part of an integrated system designed to restore the natural hydrology cycle of the area.
  • Free Water: All participants were encouraged to use the fountains providing treated free water. This also reduced the amount of waste generated.
  • Educational signs and the “Dharma Dragon” encouraged the public to be responsible in their water use.

Objectives for 2012: Eliminate 100% of water bottles during construction period. Improve shower and water point facilities at the caravan park.

Photo 4
Compost toilets
 

SANITATION: THE VERY PARTICULAR ISSUE

For the first time, 98% of toilets at Boom were composting.

  • 159 Composting (no water) toilets were constructed.
  • 15 permanent composting (no water) toilets were constructed.
  • No black water was generated.
  • In comparison with normal households this means that 50% of the water that normally would be used to flush toilets was saved.

The biological filter used in all toilets meant that 70,000 lt of organic high quality liquid fertilizer was generated. This is stored for agriculture production.

BOOM ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMME

We know that Boom is still not a fully sustainable festival. In spite of that we’ve been taking all the possible steps and commitments to reduce the trace of this event for the Sacred Earth. There is still a long way to go and huge improvements to be done. We acknowledge the space to evolve and the ecological pathway is an imperative for us, so we’ll keep researching the ways to reduce our footprint and give back to the Sacred Earth what a gathering of more than 20,000 people does to the environment. We Are All One.

Photo 5
Land Art at Boom 2010
 

Ashtrays: 20,000 pocket ashtrays delivered at the welcome point, Boom Bus station and Info Stand thus reducing the trace of cigarette butts onsite.

Recycling: Although we reduced, recycled and reduced in many aspects as you read above, recycling at Boom was a big issue. We took a step back regarding recycling at Boom when city council told us they couldn’t carry it out properly. Not only was the amount of plastic outrageous during both the construction period and Boom itself, the public system for recycling was not running at all.

They didn’t grant us recycle bins nor the transport for the plastic/metal/paper into recycling stations. Without local recycling units we couldn’t find any service that could rid us of this rubbish properly.

For next year priority goes for recycling bins and finding a way to partner with an NGO that can channel all the plastic properly.

Photo 6
Live painting at Dance Temple
 

ABOUT BOOM –  FEEDBACK AT SOCIAL NETWORKS, FORUMS AND SITES

We spend dozens of hours online and we read everything about Boom carefully. We love to read feedback about what went well and not so well.

One major point of negative feedback refers to some of the music played in the afternoons. We agree with this and we’ll change the format as we wrote already in our Letter for the Boomers Part I. But we need to underline that in no case will Boom clash with the creative freedom of DJs.

Another bit of negative feedback regards distances. We agree and as we wrote in the previous volume of this letter, we’ll change the whole design of the site to make it easier and with better conditions (for instance, showers and more water points at the caravan park).

Positive feedback goes to: the vibe of the festival; the art installations, the bamboo and cane constructions; the cultural diversity of Boom with music, performing arts, theatre, videoart, to name just a few; the new location; the intercultural atmosphere of a gathering of the tribes – we had people from 70 countries.

By the way, where is the feedback on the Theatroom and the Liminal Zone?

Many thanks for your words, you can keep writing, posting, twitting, blogging or you can simply email us to: info@boomfestival.org.

Photo 7
Ambient Paradise goes Cosmic!
 

BOOM 2012 DATES ANNOUNCED – THEME AND TICKETS SOON  www.boomfestival.org

The next edition of Boom will take place between the last week of July and the first days of August 2012 – in sync with the first full Moon of August.

Exact dates, theme and ticket sales will be available in a few weeks time.

Photo 8

Video Art at Boom 2010

BOOM 2010 Photo Gallery – Part II   Check the pictures and magic moments that we spent together. Click here!

The new Greener Festival Award 2010 is unveiled!

Winners of the 2010 Greener Festival Award are set to get our brand new trophy – although its not exactly brand spanking new-  as each trophy is made out of a recycled wine bottle – but with a brand new label design by our very own Luke, indicating that the winner has recieved the Greener Festival Award 2010 in one of three classes – Improving, Commended or Outstanding.

In Australia  nine Festivals already have the Greener Festival Award and our Awards Organiser over in Oz,  Amie,  has kindy agreed to locate suitable wine bottles, empty them and affix our labels once she has, ahem, finished with them! The winner in Australia are Bluesfest, The Falls Festival (on two sites) WOMADelaide, Southbound, Fairbridge, Island Vibe, Blues n Roots and Peats Ridge (who were awarded an outstanding Greener Festival Award) and will be gettig their trophies soon.

The final list of Award winners from the UK, European the USA will be announced in September and we hope to hand out the Award Trophies to UK winners at the UK Festival Awards in November (along with the overall Greener Festival award for the best performing UK festival, last year won by the Croissant Neuf Summer Party) and we hope to give out the winners’ trophies to European Festivals at the European Festival Awards at The Eurosonic/Noorderslag Festival in Gronigen, Holland in January 2011 along with the award for best overall “Green ‘n’ Clean” European festival organised by our friends at the European Festivals’ organisation Yourope (won by the Oya Festival last year).

Last year’s Greener Festival Award Trophy was made out of recycled Plastic Bottles, re-moulded Wellington Boots and crushed CDs and designed by Sade Goddard, a student at Keswick School in Cumbria,

Photo:  Ben Challis

http://www.eurosonic-noorderslag.nl/en/conference/

Get involved in the Greener Festival Awards

The new GREENER FESTIVAL AWARDS scheme is open for 2010. If you organise a music or arts festival – or if you work at a festival then please do think about entering and making your festival a greener, friendlier place. The Self Assessment form can be downloaded from the home pages at www.agreenerfestival.com . This can be returned either to return digitally (preferred) or as a pdf to be posted back. Each Festival that enters needs to complete this Self Assessment and then submit this to AGF before your event with as much supporting documentation as possible – this might include a carbon footprint, an environmental impact assessment or a traffic and transport plan. There are some very useful tools on the Julies Bicycle website (the IG Tools) to help festivals and events measure greenhouse gas emissions – see http://www.juliesbicycle.com/resources and these can help reduce your carbon footprint. AGF will also need to appoint an environmental assessor to visit your Festival to complete an independent audit

In 2009 37 festivals in the UK, mainland Europe, the USA and Australia were awarded the prestigious Greener Festival Award and recipients included T-in-the-Park in Scotland, The Isle of Wight, The City of London Festival, Waveform, Croissant Neuf and Glastonbury in the UK, Bonnaroo and Rothbury in the USA and Bluesfest and Peats Ridge in Australia.  The Awards are widely publicised in both trade press and in mainstream press around the world and are recognised as a significant independent award recognising best environmental practice. The overall Greener Festival Award for best environmental performance will be awarded to one festival at the UK Festival Awards 2010. AGFG have also have linked up with Yourope and Virtual Festivals for the European Festival Awards and they will award the overall Green ‘n’ Clean Award for best environmental performance for a European Festival at the European Festival Awards 2010. This year the winners in the UK were the Croissant Neuf festival and the Winners in Europe were the Oya Festival in Norway.

You can get in touch with the team at AGreenerFestival using email to  agreenerfestival@aol.com

And the winners of 2009 Greener Festival Award are …

And the winners are ....

And the winners are ....

The final list of Greener Festival Award winners has been announced for 2009 with another twenty festivals picking up the prestigious gong, adding to the seventeen which were announced in July, midway through the Festival season in the UK. The new awards go to festivals including Bestival, The City of London Festival, the Cambridge Folk Festival, Oya Festival in Norway, West Beach in the USA and The Croissant Neuf Summer Party. These Festivals join festivals such as Glastonbury, T-in-the-Park, Download, Firegathering and The Isle of Wight festival who had already picked up the coveted award.  We are particularly pleased with the number of outstanding festivals in 2009 with thirteen festivals being awarded very high marks. The Award is based on a 56 part questionnaire which covers office management, greenhouse gas emissions, supporting green initiatives, travel and transport, waste and recycling, water management, environmental protection and noise reduction and almost all the festivals will receive a visit from an independent auditor to assess their green efforts.

All winning Festivals will receive a special trophy designed by competition winner Sade Goddard from Keswick School in Cumbria whose winning design features a Red Kite motif and is made from recycled plastic bottles, crushed CDs and remoulded Wellington boots.

The winner of the overall Greener Festival Award 2009 will be announced at the UK Festival Awards which will be held at the O2 Arena in London on November 19th 2009.

We were worried that in a year when the recession bit hard we might see Festivals shying away from their ongoing commitment to green issues, but we have been generally pleased with the efforts of festivals around the world to keep sustainability high on their own agenda and to promote environmental awareness to fans. We had more ‘outstanding’ winners in 2009 and a 20% rise in applications from 2008, with more international applications than ever with five winners from Australia, four from the USA and four from mainland Europe. But much remains to be done and in the UK, a car centric society means that audience travel, and indeed leisure travel in general is a massive problem, clearly not helped by an obvious lack of coherent public transport policies.

The Greener Festival Awards are supported by Robertson Taylor, insurance brokers.

OUTSTANDING GREENER FESTIVALS

Bestival (England)

Bonnaroo (USA)

Big Tent (Scotland)

Bluesfest (Aus)

Croissant Neuf Summer Party (Wales)

Eolica (Canary Islands, Spain)

Isle of Wight (England)

Peats Ridge (Aus)                             

Rothbury (USA

Southbound (Aus)    

Sunrise (England)     

Waveform (England)

Workhouse (Wales)

 

THE GREENER FESTIVAL AWARD WINNERS

Big Session (England)

Cambridge Folk Festival (England)

Camp Bestival (England)

The City of London Festival (England)

The Falls Festival  (Australia)

Glastonbury Festival (England)

Firegathering (England)

Manchester International Festival (England)

Oya Festival  (Norway)

Rototom Sunsplash (Italy)                                                 

Sonisphere (England)

Summer Sundae Weekender (England)

Szeged Youth Festival (Szegedi Ifjúsági Napok, Hungary)

T-in-the-Park (Scotland)

West Beach  (USA)

WOMADelaide (Australia)

 

IMPROVING GREENER FESTIVALS

Atlanta Jazz Festival  (USA)

Big Chill (England)

Download (England)

The Glade (England)

Hard Rock Calling (England)

Standon Calling (England)

Wireless (England)

Y-Not (England)

First Greener Festival Awards for 2009 announced

Moo should try and leave no trace!

Moo should try and leave no trace!

Seven English festivals, one Scottish, one Italian, two American and five Australian events are the first recipients of the coveted 2009 Greener Festival Award, acknowledging the events’ efforts to reduce their environmental impact. In the UK, The Sunrise Celebration, Download, Firegathering, the Glastonbury Festival, Wireless, Hard Rock Calling and the Isle of Wight Festival all were praised for their green policies and on-site activities whilst in Scotland T-in-the-Park was congratulated for its innovative approach to water use and engaging with the audience to reduce the festival’s greenhouse gas emissions - the massive Rototom Reggae Sunsplash in Italy was similarly praised. In America, the Atlanta Jazz Festival and the 80,000 capacity Bonnaroo Festival were both praised  for coherent and effective environmental best practices whilst in Australia the fantastic five Festivals who received the award were Peats Ridge, The Falls Festival, Bluesfest, WomAdelaide and Southbound were all congratulated for their efforts. All the award winners in 2009 will receive a special trophy designed by sixth form student Sade Goddard from Keswick School in Cumbria whose competition winning design is constructed from recycled plastics made from crushed CDs, remoulded plastic water bottles and unwanted wellington boots. The recycled plastic boards made by Smile Plastics “combine a strong environmental message with an evocative and distinctive appeal linked to the processing of plastic waste.” 

The Greener Award is based on a 56 point checklist which covers green office policies, energy use and carbon reduction, travel and transport, support for green initiatives, waste management, recycling, water use and environmental protection and noise pollution and we have a team of environmental auditors who visit festivals to assess environmental good practice and effective green policies. The Award scheme is supported by Robertson Taylor, specialist insurance brokers for the music and entertainment industries. This is the third year of our awards scheme and it is clear that our participating event organisers are doing more and more to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, reduce waste and move towards a carbon neutral infrastructure. The key issue now is working with the audience to reduce travel emissions – which can sometimes make up almost three quarters of a festivals’ carbon footprints. Our auditors have noticed that more and more festivals are starting to work with the audience to promote sustainable lifestyles – the team that came back from the Isle of Wight raved about the really clever initiatives there. In the US the Bonnaroo Festival was praised for its innovative education programmes and both Glastonbury and T-in-the-Park both work hard to promote green issues – by adopting new and improved practices each and every year, and by working to publicise new initiatives. We are also delighted with the new Award trophy designed and made by students at Keswick School in Cumbria which combines an attractive design with recycled plastics, CDs and Wellington boots, thousands of pairs of which are sadly left behind at festivals.

Recycled wellies and CDs make up new eco-award

 
I'm like a bird in the sky

I'm like a bird in the sky

This is the new prototype for the ’Greener Festival’ Award which is given to festivals who can meet the challenging assessment to prove they are engaged in reducing their environmental impact and are moving towards a low carbon future. The new Award trophy was designed by competition winner Sade Goddard, a sixth form student at Keswick School, Cumbria.  Sade won £100 in music download vouchers for her fantastic effort. The runner up was Sarah Kitching. The Award, which was awarded to 32 festivals  across the world in 2008 including Bestival, Bonnaroo in the USA, Bluesfest in Australia, Glastonbury, Latitude, Shambala and Waveform,  is already attracting entries in 2009 and the new trophy will be made from plastic recycled from crushed CDs and - we love this – discarded wellington boots – which are often abandoned in their thousands at festival sites. The design is based on the Red Kite, the endangered bird of prey which was recently re-introduced to England and Wales where it has become extinct – the logo is used by A Greener Festival for it’s Award scheme.The Greener Festival Award was launched in 2007 and last year 24 UK festivals, 2 European festivals, 2 US festivals and 4 Australian festivals won the Award. We also work closely with Yourope, the European Festivals organisation, who awarded another 20 festivals with their ‘Green n Clean’ Award. Watch out for these Awards, they show that a Festival is working hard to improve it’s environmental impact and is doing what it can to fight climate change.