Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Tuesday, July 27 2021 - 00:24
AsiaNet
Keeping cool in Tokyo – heat and humidity measures under the microscope
TOKYO, July 26, 2021 /PRNewswire - AsiaNet/ --

Olympic Equestrian Dressage competitions are already well underway and, by 
tomorrow morning, all equine athletes will have settled into their temporary 
home at the historic Equestrian Park venue in Baji Koen, with the arrival of 
the final batch of Show Jumping horses. To allow our equine and human athletes 
to optimise their performance in the Tokyo climate, comprehensive heat and 
humidity protocols have been put in place by the FEI and the Tokyo Organising 
Committee of the Olympic & Paralympic Games (TOCOG). 

The FEI has been working on minimising the impact of heat and humidity on 
performance since before the Atlanta 1996 Olympic Games, and the work on Tokyo 
2020 is a continuation of that. 

Heat countermeasures in place onsite at both Equestrian venues for equine 
athletes:
- Air-conditioned stables at both Baji Koen and Sea Forest Park (Cross Country 
  venue) 
- Training and competitions scheduled for early morning and evening (under
  floodlights) 
- Constant monitoring of current and forecast climatic conditions, working 
  with the official Tokyo 2020 weather provider, Japan Meteorological Agency 
- Constant monitoring of onsite climatic conditions using the Wet Bulb Globe 
  Temperature (WBGT) index, which measures heat stress in direct sunlight, 
  taking into account temperature, humidity, wind speed, sun angle and cloud 
  cover (solar radiation) – every 15 minutes during the Cross Country 
- Constant and close monitoring of horses by a world-class veterinary team, 
  multiple cooling facilities (shade tents, cold misting fans, unlimited ice 
  and water, mobile cooling units etc) 
- Specific climate mitigation protocols for training and warm-up and also 
  in-competition 
- Monitoring horses in work using thermal imaging cameras, enabling body 
  temperature to be estimated accurately from a distance of 5-10 metres.
--- Allows for monitoring without interfering with athletes 
--- Helps with early identification of horses at potential risk of overheating
--- Allows for timely interventions such as rapid cooling during training and 
    warm-up and prior to competing
--- Possibility to stop a horse on the Cross Country course and bring mobile 
    cooling units out to provide rapid cooling. (These mobile cooling units 
    are also available for the arena-based competitions and in the warm-up
    arenas.)

Heat countermeasures in place onsite at both Equestrian venues for humans:
- Provision of shade, special cooling tents/areas (including cold misting 
  fans) for athletes and entourage 
- Facilities and measures for officials/volunteers including rest periods, 
  shade and rest areas, water etc

READ MORE: [ https://inside.fei.org/fei/your-role/media ]

Images
Images available on FEI Flickr [ 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/gallery_fei/albums/72157708780958282 ]for 
editorial use only.

FEI Social Media
Facebook [ https://www.facebook.com/the.fei/ ], Instagram [ 
https://www.instagram.com/fei_global/?hl=en ], Twitter [ 
https://twitter.com/FEI_Global?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor 
], FEI-YouTube [ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCb3uedNKWKG7gGDYQJ1VsWg ]

#Equestrian #Dressage #Eventing #Showjumping #Tokyo2020 #Olympics

Video content
All video footage is available at https://fei.broadcast-content.tv/ with the 
following login details: media@fei.org Password: FEI2018

Media Toolkit
View the FEI Equestrian Media Toolkit here: [ 
https://inside.fei.org/system/files/EQUESTRIAN%20MEDIA%20TOOL%20KIT_TOKYO2020.pdf 
]

Follow all media updates [ https://inside.fei.org/fei/your-role/media ]and 
competition results [ https://tokyo2020.live.fei.org/ ]throughout the Games.
Click here [ https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/en/sports/equestrian/ ]for more 
information on Equestrian at the Olympic Games [ 
https://olympics.com/en/sports/equestrian/ ]
About FEI [ https://inside.fei.org/fei/about-fei ]

Media contact:
Shannon Gibbons
FEI Media Relations & Media Operations Manager
Shannon.gibbons@fei.org
+41-78-750-61-46

Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1581259/FEI_Thermal_image_Tokyo_2020.jpg 
Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1578235/Logo.jpg 
 
Source: FEI
Translations

Japanese