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The view from the Arun Jaitley Stadium in the heart of Delhi is milky. On the field, Bangladesh are on their way to beating Sri Lanka at the Cricket World Cup but these players are not to be envied. The air quality is so bad that training sessions before the match had been canceled. The air quality index (AQI) in Delhi has been moving between unhealthy and hazardous in recent days. Outdoor activities are not currently recommended due to possible health issues.
A blow for India’s Olympic hopes
The cricket stars still have to work hard. During the game, they breathe particularly harmful particulate matter (PM), the particles of which are so small that they remain in the lungs for a long time. These are measured as PM2.5 particles and in Delhi are currently reading 184 micrograms per cubic meter – 12 times the limit set by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
With air purifiers in the dressing rooms and water misting alongside the pitch, the organizers are trying to alleviate the problems at the World Cup matches.
“In an ideal world, you don’t want a situation like this,” said Indiacaptain Rohit Sharma on the air quality issue. “But I’m pretty sure the concerned people are taking the necessary steps to avoid these kind of situations. It’s not ideal, everyone knows that.”
The problems at the Cricket World Cup are also not good news for India’s image as an up-and-coming sporting nation that wants to host the 2036 Olympic Games. The images of a smog-ridden Delhi certainly don’t help that cause.
Heat, smog, artificial snow – sport is affected
It’s becoming increasingly common to see elite sport affected by environmental and climate changes, explains author David Goldblatt.
“The Australian (tennis) Open, which was played in a heat wave. You had like a thousand people being treated for heat issues,” Goldblatt tells DW. “As you know, Tokyo 2020, we had outdoor swimmers swimming in really health threatening 30-degree (86 degrees Fahrenheit) water. One of these events is going to be cataclysmic.”
Goldblatt is not just an an author but also the co-founder of “Football for Future,” an organization challenging football’s stakeholders to respond to the changing natural world. He believes sport will have to change, replacing relentless growth with reduction.
“The bigger question is really over the next kind of 20 years, global sport as a whole and domestic sports have got to think very, very hard about, can we keep growing? Maybe we need to actually do less,” Goldblatt argues.
The battle between more and less is currently most apparent inskiing, a sport that has perhaps been the most affected by the climate crisis. While the the sport’s governing body (FIS) want to expand the current World Cup calendar, criticism is growing louder.
“”We cannot deny climate change and must adapt,” said Christian Scherer, the general secretary of Austria’s skiing association.
Factors such as snow safety and sustainability by using existing facilities, will play a central role in the future when awarding major events. The same applies to heat conditions or air quality, as is now the case in India.
2030 World Cup – ‘symbolically insane’
Sport is not just a victim of the climate crisis though. From amateur athletes getting in the car several times a week for training and competitions to major events such as the Olympics, sport is also an offender when it comes to the environment.
“It’s symbolically insane,” Goldblatt says of the 2030 World Cup. As a football fan, he sympathizes with opening the tournament in Uruguay, but says that a tournament with 105 matches on three continents, with tens of thousands of fans traveling back and forth, is a farce from an environmental point of view. Although sports associations such as the International Olympic Committee and FIFA are making efforts to label their events as “climate-friendly” or even “climate-neutral” by paying for CO2 compensation programs, this is “not a plausible plan”, Goldblatt tells DW.
Ironically, both FIFA and the IOC have committed to more climate protection as part of the World Climate Conference. The declared goal of the sports action plan: Greenhouse gas emissions are to be halved by 2030 and reduced to zero by 2040. Further talks are scheduled for the upcoming COP 28 world climate summit in Dubai at the end of November.
More voices needed
Cricket’s governing body (ICC) has not yet signed up to the United Nations’ action plan but has set its own sustainability goals. The smog-ridden World Cup shows how necessary it is for sport to be a role model in environmental protection. Prominent voices from sport itself are therefore needed, Goldblatt demands:
“We need a Marcus Rashford. We need all of those folks, men and women in football and in cricket. Where is the Indian cricketer who’s going to stand up? And they would have a major voice in Indian politics.”
There are others who have though. Australia’s cricket captain Pat Cummins has been vocal about the climate impact on cricket and worked with Australian cricket to ensure that they are doing their part on the cricket for climate program. Cummins knows if they don’t, it’ll soon be “game over for the sport we love.”
This article was originally written in German
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