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VENUE
MTCC WINS 2007 AIPC INNOVATION
AWARD FOR ITS ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERSHIP
11/08/2007
<br>The Metro Toronto Convention Centre (MTCC) today
announced that it has won a 2007 AIPC Innovation Award. The
award was bestowed upon the MTCC by the International Association
of Congress Centres, which is considered the industry association
for professional convention and exhibition centre managers
worldwide.
<br>The AIPC Innovation Awards were just launched this
year to recognize specific projects or initiatives that represent
¡°innovation¡± in the true sense of the word: projects or initiatives
that represent the development of new, more creative or more
effective approaches to any aspect of congress centre management,
operations or marketing. Emphasis in judging is on how effectively
the initiative addresses its objectives, which may be to improve
efficiency or market position, effect cost savings, or achieve
environmental goals.
<br> ¡°I was very pleased that our panel of judges for
the inaugural International Association of Convention Centres
(AIPC) Innovation Award selected the Metro Toronto Convention
Centre's Zero Waste program for this recognition¡±, said AIPC
President Barbara Maple. ¡°We recognize that with the greening
of the meetings industry of growing importance to our clients
and communities, convention centres have a major role to play,
and the leadership demonstrated by the MTCC will make an important
contribution in this regard¡±.
<br>In presenting the award to MTCC CEO Barry Smith
at AIPC¡¯s meeting in Austria, on July 17th, as his colleagues
from around the world looked on, AIPC officials particularly
congratulated Smith and the MTCC for recognizing the importance
of ¡°green¡± issues to congress centres and its leadership through
the Centre¡¯s innovative Zero Waste program.
<br> ¡°Winning this important award from AIPC reaffirms
the Centre¡¯s tradition of leadership as an environmentally
responsible facility and a good corporate citizen,¡± said a
beaming Smith in accepting the prestigious award. ¡°Being a
green facility is the right thing to do and it¡¯s good for
the Earth as well. We are doing everything we can to reduce
our environmental footprint, and we hope others will follow
our lead,¡± he added.
<br>The MTCC¡¯s Zero Waste program began in late 2005,
when the Centre succeeded in mounting its first ever large-scale
Zero Waste convention. This represented an historic first
within the convention and trade show industry. The MTCC, together
with its long-time recycling partner, Turtle Island Recycling,
a highly respected recycling and waste management company,
pioneered the concept of holding large ¡°green¡± meetings and
conventions that successfully avoid adding to the existing
landfill burden by recycling everything they generate. Using
its innovative Zero Waste approach, the MTCC is able to successfully
divert from landfill a stunning 95-98% of all the waste materials
generated during an event.
<br>This means that by using the MTCC¡¯s Zero Waste method,
a typical four-day event with 3,000 people in attendance,
a total of approximately 16 metric tonnes of waste materials
can be captured for recycling and composting, including organics,
plastics, paper, metal, glass, textiles, wood and other materials.
The MTCC calculates this saves 57 trees, approximately 75,000
litres of water, 39,310 kWh of energy, 16,200 litres of oil,
77 kg of air pollutants, and 85 cubic metres of landfill space.
<br>Smith said that this newest achievement is just
the latest in a series of environmental firsts by the Centre
and that the facility is widely recognized for its ¡°green¡±
reputation. ¡°We are highly committed to being a global leader
in this area and providing opportunities for our clients and
events to do the same,¡± he added.
<br>The MTCC is well known for its firm commitment to
being a leader in environmental responsibility. The Centre
has a solid record in recycling (64%), and energy conservation.
The building also has an enormous 300,000-square-foot green
roof, a partnership with Second Harvest for food leftovers
(2,000 lbs. recycled annually), and a variety of other sustainability
programs. In addition, the MTCC was the first facility to
be on Enwave Energy¡¯s Deep Lake Water Cooling system, technology
which provides the Centre¡¯s building cooling by using extremely
cold water extracted from Lake Ontario.
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