Sports Launch Climate Action Framework at COP24
The sports sector and UN Climate Change have launched today the Sports for Climate Action Framework to gather sports organizations, teams, athletes, and fans in a concerted effort to raise awareness and action to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.
Representatives of the diverse global sports industry, working with UN Climate Change over the past year, created the Framework to drive emission reductions of sports operations and tap the popularity and passion of sport to engage millions of fans in the effort.
The launch event, which took place on the
margins of the UN Climate Change Conference (COP24) in
Katowice, Poland, featured founding signatories:
International Olympic Committee (IOC), FIFA, International
Sailing Federation, World Surfing League, Forest Green
Rovers Football Club, and the French Tennis Federation
(Roland Garros), Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics, and Paris 2024
Summer Olympics.
“The IOC is proud to have taken on a
leadership role in the Sports for Climate Action
Initiative,” said HSH Prince Albert II, Chair of the IOC
Sustainability and Legacy Commission, speaking at the event.
“With its global reach, universal appeal and the power to
inspire and influence millions of people around the globe,
sport is uniquely placed to drive global climate action and
encourage crowds to join in. As countries here in Katowice
prepare to turn their climate commitments into reality, we
stand ready to leverage the power of sport to support their
efforts.”
The Framework has two overarching objectives: achieving a clear trajectory for the global sports community to combat climate change, and using sports as a unifying tool to drive climate awareness and action among global citizens.
Sports organizations recognize in the Framework that they need to take an active part in achieving the goal of the Paris Agreement, climate neutrality by mid-century, and they see their climate efforts also contributing to the broader Sustainable Development Goals.
“You recognize that because you’ve built significant global trust and moral leadership, and because sports touches on every cross-section of society, you can drive positive change throughout the world,” said UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa. “I’m here to encourage you to use your significant global leadership position to help us address the greatest challenge of our time: climate change.”
Sports produces climate-changing emissions in many ways, through associated travel, energy use, construction of venues, catering, and other ways. Work has in fact already begun. The International Olympic Committee and UN Climate Change have cooperated in the production of a climate action guide – “Sustainability Essentials: Sports for Climate Action” – for use by sports federations and others, which was released at the event.
As part of IOC’s contribution to the initiative, IOC also released at COP24: “Carbon Footprint Methodology for the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games”, which provides detailed guidance to the Organizing Committees on how to measure the carbon footprint of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Together, these publications provide essential guidance for how to make sports more sustainable and climate smart and are an essential initial input to the new initiative.
The sports sector accepts its responsibility to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in line with the goal of the Paris Agreement – limiting global average temperature rise to 2 degrees Celsius and to strive for the safer 1.5-degree target. Sports for Climate Action now invites sports organizations, governing bodies, federations, leagues, and clubs to join this initiative by uniting behind a set of principles to get on track for the net-zero emissions economy of 2050.
“Our commitment to protecting our climate remains unwavering. We recognize the critical need for everyone to help implement the Paris Agreement and accelerate the change needed to reach greenhouse gas emission neutrality in the second half of the twenty-first century,” said FIFA Secretary General Fatma Samoura. “FIFA welcomes the UN’s development of the Sports for Climate Action Framework, and I am pleased to confirm that FIFA will support the vision outlined in the new framework.”
Sport also recognizes its unique, indeed unparalleled, ability to inform and mobilize millions of people around a love of sport and admiration for their sport heroes.
“Climate change is the biggest challenge facing the planet. UEFA firmly believes that football, with its strong and ever-growing environmental conscience, in particular in areas such as sustainable event management, has a duty to play a role in addressing this issue. This is why we are happy to have the opportunity to sign the United Nations Sports for Climate Action Framework,” said UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin.
The total list of 17 signatories who signed on to the
framework are:
• International Olympic
Committee
• AC Fukushima United, Co,
Ltd
• FIFA
• Forest Green Rovers Football
Club
• Formula E
• French Tennis Federation –
Roland Garros
• International Sailing
Federation
• Kamakura International Football Club and
Gangsters
• Kyoto University American Football
Club
• Kyoto University Football Club
• Paris 2024
Summer Olympics
• Rugby League World Cup
2021
• Sano High-School Rugby Club
• Tokohu Ice
Hockey Club Co., Ltd (Free Blades)
• Tokyo 2020 Summer
Olympics
• UEFA
• World Surf League
The
sport sector believes it can do more by working together,
according to the principles and objectives laid down in the
Sports for Climate Action Framework.
In early 2019, the
adopters of the Framework will be invited to form working
groups to plan, pursue and enhance work under each of 16
principles laid out in the
Framework.