Sustainability Links Tropical Tree Climbing with FIFA World Cup Football Tournament in New Video from FIFA TV
Manaus, Brazil (PRWEB) July 26, 2013 -- Organizers from the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) are gearing up for the first wave of ticket sales for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Football Tournament, being held in Brazil next summer. Journalists and crews ventured far from the noise and bustle of the country’s heavily populated cities to the serene center of the Amazon Rain Forest, where Tropical Tree Climbing (TTC), an eco-tourism adventure destination tucked deep in the heart of Brazil’s Amazon Rain Forest, helps create the first promotional video for the 2014 games.
It may seem unusual for football organizers to venture far from the country’s 200 million-plus fans base to promote next year’s games; but since the upcoming World Cup games is focused on spreading a message of responsible eco-tourism and sustainability, TTC proved to be a shining example of sustainability practices.
TTC Founder and Director Leonide Principe and his wife Vanessa Mariño live with their two young children on their private, 662-acre parcel of pristine Amazon Rain Forest, from where they also operate their guided tour and nature photography business. The family is passionate about maintaining the integrity of the Rain Forest by protecting it from man-made pollution, and they prove it by living as environmental stewards every day.
“In addition to monitoring and neutralizing the carbon gasses produced through our operations, we offer the opportunity for our guests to neutralize their own CO2 emissions produced during their Amazon Rain Forest travels,” Principe says. “Through the local NGO "Carbon Neutro" (Carbon Neutral) program “Institute for Conservation and Sustainable Development of Amazonas (IDESAM,)” we have achieved a carbon footprint of zero, and we’re teaching others how they can do it too.”
In the run-up to World Cup tournament next year, the Federation has established guidelines on the topics of green construction, climate change, responsible waste management, volunteer training and more, making renewable energy the name of next year’s game according to Federico Addiechi, FIFA Head of Corporate Social Responsibility.
“We are hosting a lot of activities; for example, next week we have a “Football for Hope” forum scheduled, and numerous other events geared to share our commitment to renewable energy in order to produce clean energy,” Addiechi says.
“The World Cup organization has an enormous influence on society, and we plan to make use of that influence as we give a voice to sustainability and ecological responsibility.”
Addiechi said that sustainability plays a particularly important role in Brazil in 2014, as more than three million people from around the world are expected to join Brazil’s two million-plus citizens for the games, scheduled to kick off in Sao Paulo on June 12, and play in 11 additional Brazilian cities through July 13. The final championship game will be held July 13, 2014 in Rio de Juniero. For more information, visit the Tropical Tree Climbing website and fill out the contact information request form for more information.
About Tropical Tree Climbing:
A Tropical Tree Climbing (TTC) was conceived in 1997 when Leonide Principe took his first tree climbing lessons while on scientific expeditions. At the time, he was focused on photographing Amazonian epiphytes for his "Aerial Plants of the Amazon" project, which was supported and sponsored by the Department of Culture of the Government of the Amazon State of Brazil.
Ready to do something with his new-found tree climbing skills and knowledge acquired from his early experiences as a nature photographer and scientific explorer. In 1998, Principe and his wife Vanessa Mariño, purchased 670-acres of virgin rain forest in Northern Brazil and began to build Tropical Tree Climbing, bringing recreational tree climbing and a tree climbing training school to the Amazon Rain Forest, where they are raising their two young children.
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Vanessa Mariño, Tropical Tree Climbing, http://www.tropicaltreeclimbing.com, 1.973.783-2277 +55.92.2123-4791 (BRAZIL), [email protected]
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