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Salla 2032 bid to host the Olympic Summer Games highlighted climate crisis
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Salla 2032 bid to host the Olympic Summer Games highlighted climate crisis

Salla 2032 bid for Olympic Summer Games highlighted the climate crisis

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Salla, a small Finnish city (pop. 3,407 people) announced that it would compete with cities like Madrid Jakarta, Istanbul, Istanbul, and Doha in order to host the 2032 Summer Olympic Games. Salla is unique in many ways from the more well-known cities. Perhaps its average annual temperature of 31.6°F is perhaps the most notable.

Historically, being located above the Arctic Circle would be considered a competitive disadvantage to host the Summer Games, but if climate change continues apace, Finland’s coldest town up in the country’s Lapland region believes it would be ready.

A campaign by São Paulo-based ad agency Africa and Lapland’s marketing arm, The House of Lapland, “Salla 2032” mobilized the entire city, with content like a hilariously straight-faced bid video that starred Salla citizens stumping for summer, and a jaunt from the mascot and the mayor to the IOC’s Swiss headquarters to deliver the official bid. It’s the winner of the advertising category of Fast Company’s 2022 World Changing Ideas Awards.

[Image: courtesy Africa]

The novelty of an Arctic town bidding for the Summer Games got attention, especially with support from Greta Thunberg’s advocacy organization Fridays For Future. The campaign strategically used that attention to raise awareness about climate change and spur action. It was timed right when the world was watching the Tokyo Summer Games. It’s a fun way to get a deadly serious point across, and illustrate the very real consequences of not acting quickly enough on climate change. 

[Image: courtesy Africa]

“We are concerned about climate change, and as we live here in the Arctic circle, we are experiencing it before many others,” says Salla’s mayor, Erkki Parkkinen. “We don’t want to be the best place to host Summer Games in 2032 because that would mean that temperatures would have not stopped rising. Summer Games’ values are to unify people and nations. We need this same spirit to stop climate change.”

[Image: courtesy Africa]

Nicholas Bergantin, Africa creative director, says that the key to the campaign’s success was getting locals to buy into it. “They all believed and acted like they would host the Summer Olympic Games,” says Bergantin. “They all believed in doing what was important. There were no actors. Only Salla people were able to sell a crazy idea but with a serious message. Without the community support, the campaign would never be successful as it was.”

Brisbane, Australia was awarded the 2032 Olympics. However, with no media budget, the Salla Campaign generated more than 7 billion media impressions and $157 million in earned media. This helped to remind us that the climate emergency does not play a role. 



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