The Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games - the biggest event ever to be held in France - represented a new model for the organisation of global events, one that was more sustainable, inclusive and useful. As of the bid, the organisers structured their actions to maximise economic, social, environmental and local impacts, in line with existing public priorities, notably inclusion, the green transition and health. The impact and legacy strategy covered access to sport, the mobilisation of public procurement to benefit the social and solidarity economy (SSE) and micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSME), as well as employment and inclusion. A special effort was made to ensure that the legacy of the Games is passed on to local communities, enabling them to take ownership of the Games’ objectives. The Organising Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Games (OCOG) was also committed to delivering sustainable and useful infrastructure, such as the Olympic and Paralympic Village, which will be transformed into a mixed-use neighbourhood with a low carbon footprint.
The strategy was based on shared governance and a robust monitoring framework. Multi-stakeholder governance brought together the State, local authorities, the sports community, businesses, social economy players and civil society. This governance, as well as the enhanced capacity of the stakeholders to implement policies with a sustainable impact, is an intangible legacy of the Games. A monitoring and evaluation framework was voluntarily put in place by Paris 2024 from the outset. To strengthen this approach, 13 evaluation studies were implemented by the French government to analyse key areas of impact - including employment, sustainability, sport, health, social inclusion and territorial development - with some focusing on short-, medium- and long-term effects.
Paris 2024 has improved international standards. France is the first country to apply the OECD's impact assessment indicators for global events, validated by the IOC and offering a common method for assessing economic, social and environmental impacts. Paris 2024 also contributed to the revision of the ISO 20121 standard on responsible event management, which now includes requirements on responsible purchasing. Paris 2024 also obtained “exemplary” certification under the ISO 20400 standard on responsible procurement, becoming the first organisation in France to achieve this level.