Unsporting climate
Editorial
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-024-02138-4
Unsporting climate
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Participating in or spectating
at sporting events is a favourite
pastime for many, but climate
change could alter the sporting
landscape. Yet, sports are unifying to
be part of the solution.
nature climate change
diseases and higher body mass index. Yet,
sports and physical activity communities are
important social networks for resilience and
recovery following disasters, so if climate
change reduces participation, these benefits
could be lost.
But large-scale sporting events aren’t just
being affected by climate change, they are
also contributing to emissions. Events such
as world championships and the Olympics
bring competitors, support staff and spectators from around the world. As other sectors
do, it is important that these events also consider sustainability and climate and environmental impact.
An analysis of the winter and summer Olympics between 1992 and 2020 showed a medium
level of sustainability for the events4, which
declined for the events over the study period.
Yet, moving to this year, if we consider the
recent Paris Summer Olympics, sustainability
was a central focus in the lead up to the event
with the publication of a sustainability and
legacy report5. The event made use of existing
infrastructure or temporary venues that could
be repurposed, reused or recycled after the
event. Before the event, it was touted that this
would be 95% of the required infrastructure.
The athlete village was a new development,
which will be converted to a new city district,
and made use of low-carbon construction
techniques, including the use of wood and
low-carbon concrete, with claims of a 30%
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions per
square metre5.
This progress aligns with the October 2021
commitment by the International Olympic
Committee to reduce direct and indirect emissions by 30% by 2024 and by 50% by 2030. Further commitments by sports organizations
can be seen by the signatories to the UNFCCC
Sports for Climate Action. It sets clear objectives to achieve commitments for sports
organizations to measure, reduce and report
greenhouse gas emissions, linked with the
Paris Agreement targets, and to use sports to
unify global citizens for climate action.
Published online: 6 September 2024
References
1. Oyama, T. et al. Sci. Rep. 12, 4010 (2022).
2. François, H. et al. Nat. Clim. Change 13, 935–942
(2023).
3. Bernard, P. et al. Sports Med. 51, 1041–1059 (2021).
4. Müller, M. et al. Nat. Sustain. 4, 340–348 (2021).
5. Paris 2024 Sustainability & Legacy Pre-Games Report (Paris
2024, May 2024); https://go.nature.com/4dENQ9v
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Credit: Tracy Packer Photography/Moment Open/Getty
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limate change will directly
impact sports events and athletes through increased extreme
weather events, such as thunderstorms and floods, as well as
heatwaves and temperature extremes. This
past year has already seen these impacts, with
the recent example of Tour de France organizers planning ways to protect the riders and
reduce the approximately 60 °C road temperatures that can cause the asphalt surface
to melt. Adjusting event timing is a common
way to combat high temperatures, as seen
at the 2019 Athletics World Championships
in Qatar where the marathon started at midnight. However, as climate change continues
and higher temperatures become the new
normal, will summer events need to shift to
the cooler months of the year to proceed? A
2022 study considered climates that would
be suitable for the Olympic marathon at the
end of the century, and it was found that more
countries could host the event if it was moved
to October1.
Winter sports also suffer from warmer temperatures. Images of ski fields with runs only
available with man-made snow in the middle of
the season highlight the uncertainty of snow
futures. The Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022
was the first Olympics to use almost 100% artificial snow, and without snowmaking future
warming means that many snow resorts are
at high risk for low snow supply — one study
showed that 53% (98%) of 2,234 resorts in 28
European countries with 2 °C (4 °C) of warming were at risk2.
This impact of climate applies at all levels,
from elite sport to community, and includes
social physical activity. A systematic review3
found that extreme temperatures, air pollution and natural disasters all reduced physical
activity levels, and this was most pronounced
in older adults, as well as in adults with chronic
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