Three-quarters (75%) of our sport’s athletes perceive a direct negative impact on their health and performance due to climate change with 85% expressing that the sport of athletics has experienced adverse consequences, according to the third annual survey* conducted by World Athletics to gauge the attitudes of elite athletes about environmental and social issues.
Climate Crisis

Three-quarters of athletes directly impacted by climate change, World Athletics survey finds

Three-quarters (75%) of our sport’s athletes perceive a direct negative impact on their health and performance due to climate change with 85% expressing that the sport of athletics has experienced adverse consequences, according to the third annual survey* conducted by World Athletics to gauge the attitudes of elite athletes about environmental and social issues.... Read more

“Sport can’t escape climate change but it can help do something about it.”
Sustainability conversations

Watch: Sport on the Climate Change Front Lines

“Sport can’t escape climate change but it can help do something about it.”... Read more

Leading practitioners, researchers and scholars working at the intersection of sport and sustainability meet to discuss the importance of building collaborations to achieve sustainability goals
Sustainability conversations

Watch: Building Collaborations for Sustainable Events

Leading practitioners, researchers and scholars working at the intersection of sport and sustainability meet to discuss the importance of building collaborations to achieve sustainability goals... Read more

Organisers of more than 300 one-day competition series events and label road races have been introduced to the system and the Athletics for a Better World Standard since it was unveiled.
Sustainable events

World Athletics receives ISO 20121 certification for its Sustainable Event Management System

Organisers of more than 300 one-day competition series events and label road races have been introduced to the system and the Athletics for a Better World Standard since it was unveiled.... Read more

World Athletics Sustainability



World Athletics
is committed to ensuring that its athletics events, which are held all over the world, and its headquarters, based in Monaco, are fully aligned to the principles of sustainability.

 

This is in recognition of the growing environmental challenges that the world faces today, specifically air pollution, climate change and our overconsumption of resources. Those, coupled with a lack of global equality and diversity, create an environmental and social impact that poses a serious threat to the quality of our lives and communities.

 

Sustainability within athletics is defined as driving the practices and behaviours of all individuals and organisations developing the sport in such a way that it:

  • accounts for the needs of future generations;
  • provides a fair and level sporting platform based on sound ethical principles;
  • actively involves interested parties and is open about decisions and activities; and
  • ensures actions take a balanced approach to their social, economic and environmental impact.

In April 2020, World Athletics announced its Sustainability Strategy 2020-2030, whose central goal is to make the organisation carbon neutral by 2030. Download the Sustainability Strategy here: [ English | French | Spanish ]

 

The ten-year strategy is designed to deliver tangible benefits across the three pillars of sustainability - environmental, social and economic - by using the power of sport and athletics to create a better world for communities. The strategy includes a broad commitment to embrace sustainability principles and practices within its operations, its Member Federations and the organisation of future World Athletics Series events.

The World Athletics Sustainability Strategy aligns with 13 of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals.

 

The key benefits of the strategy include:

  • better management of the sport’s social and environmental risk factors;
  • identification of opportunities benefitting the sport and engaging a wider group of stakeholders;
  • more efficient use of resources delivering lower operating costs enabling greater investment in the sport; and
  • wider activation platform for partnerships to bringing significant economic, social and environmental benefits to local communities.

 

Components of the Sustainability Strategy include a plan to reduce World Athletics’ carbon output by 10 percent each year, a switch to 100 percent renewable energy at its headquarters by the end of 2020, the introduction of a sustainable procurement code and travel policy and to develop best practice guides for its 214 Member Federations and its event organisers.

 

The strategy is divided into six pillars, each of which contain actions and targets for the organisation to pursue:

  • leadership in sustainability;
  • sustainable production and consumption;
  • climate change and carbon;
  • local environment and air quality;
  • global equality; and
  • diversity, accessibility and wellbeing.

 

On Earth Day 2021, World Athletics became a proud signatory of the UNFCCC Sports for Climate Action Framework, an initiative supporting and guiding sports organisations to measure, reduce and offset their carbon emissions in line with the Paris Climate Agreement.

 

World Athletics Sustainability policy.

Sustainable event delivery - best practice guides

 

 

https://www.worldathletics.org/athletics-better-world/news/weltklasse-zurich-sustainability
https://www.worldathletics.org/athletics-better-world/news/bislett-games-sustainability-environment-economic-hoen