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2026 Games: Let’s Make a Positive Impact for Regional Victoria

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Young Australian person with flag Wood Central 1 e1686129452917
Young Australian person with flag Wood Central 1 e1686129452917

The 2026 Commonwealth Games for regional Victoria is not just about breaking records.

The games present an opportunity to create a lasting legacy for our regions and help protect our planet through two simple measures.

Most Victorians want these Games to be a success. But what defines success? The number of medals for our athletes? Is it the number of visitors to the regions? Jobs created? Revenue generated?

Given the current climate crisis, hosting sustainable games with a long-term legacy should be a measuring stick for success. And with two simple measures, this can be a reality.

Use more timber in the Games’ infrastructure

The first measure is obvious: using timber for the Games infrastructure and building accommodations for athletes and their entourage – and beyond.

There is no need to reinvent the wheel – there are best-practice examples everywhere.

The Paris Olympics’ climate strategy aims to slash greenhouse gas emissions and offset any residual emissions linked to the event.

The French also ensure emissions during construction are greatly reduced, especially for the athletes’ village and media apartments.

The Birmingham Commonwealth Games in 2022 were the first carbon-neutral games.

In Brisbane, host of the 2032 Olympic Games, plans are underway to rival and eclipse Paris to become a climate-positive event.

In other words, the Olympics will positively impact the climate. Using timber in construction plays a vital part here.

Timber reduces the carbon footprint of housing by replacing more energy-intensive building materials such as cement and steel.

Each two-story house sequesters around 37 t CO2-e. It’s an amazing opportunity for the timber industry to shine and make a real environmental difference.

Many nations will be looking to Victoria in 2026 – this is a unique opportunity for the Victorian Government to put its money where its mouth is.

Disappointingly, recent media reporting suggests that the Government wants to house at least some participants in converted garages as temporary bedroom facilities.

Such ‘solutions’ are far from long-term thinking.

Feasible alternatives such as modular housing are well-established, and creative solutions such as 3D-printed houses using wood fibre technology now exist.

In January 2023, Researchers from the University of Maine created a 100% bio-based 3D-printed home that can be recycled at the end of its life. Footage courtesy of @CNET

After the games, prefabricated housing could be repurposed in regional areas most in need, including disaster relief and social housing, tourism (e.g., caravan parks), farm stays, or accommodation for seasonal and farm workers.

Of course, emissions generated through travel remain a factor.

A Commonwealth Games Plantation Estate

But this is where the second measure comes in. The Games’ residual emissions can be offset by creating a Commonwealth Games Plantation Estate, which will benefit future generations.

Planting trees is more cost-effective than other options to reduce emissions, and trees naturally turn carbon dioxide into carbon-rich wood.

The plantation sector is ready to co-invest and partner with the government, while the agriculture sector can contribute through farm forestry as part of the farming enterprise.

New plantations would not only benefit a one-off event like the Commonwealth Games – but Victoria also urgently needs to build 60,000 new homes for social housing over the next decade.

Recently the Age reported that the Andrews government is considering a plan to help squeeze an extra million homes into Melbourne’s suburbs by 2050.

The Victorian Government is investing to deliver 9,300 social houses as part of its Big Housing Build program and has targeted 18 rural and regional local government areas for funding.

Most also cover Victoria’s forestry regions and the Commonwealth Games regional centres.

The challenge is to deliver housing while the global demand for wood will outstrip supply by four-fold by mid-century!

A Commonwealth Games Plantation Estate will provide Victoria with additional wood for houses and timber for paper, cardboard, pallets, and non-construction wood fibre products such as MDF and particle board products.

The Commonwealth Games present an opportunity to close the housing gap, achieve net-zero emissions, and create a sustainable future for future generations.

Victorian forestry calls on all relevant ministers and planners to collaborate and deliver a true legacy. Let’s go for the gold!