Sustainability Forward

S4E11: The World Cup’s Climate Problem - Can Football Go Global Without Burning the Planet?

39 min · 16. juni 2026
episode S4E11: The World Cup’s Climate Problem - Can Football Go Global Without Burning the Planet? cover

Beskrivelse

The 2026 World Cup has kicked off - bigger than ever, more global than ever, and possibly more carbon-intensive than ever. With 48 teams, 104 matches and host cities spread across the US, Canada and Mexico, this tournament is a celebration of football’s global reach. But it also raises an uncomfortable sustainability question: can the world’s biggest sporting event keep expanding in a warming world? In this episode of Sustainability Forward, Wrishi and Carmine look beyond the pitch to explore the climate and energy story behind World Cup 2026. We discuss why fan travel is likely to dominate the tournament’s carbon footprint, why using existing stadiums is positive but not enough, how extreme heat and humidity could affect players and fans, and whether FIFA’s sustainability strategy goes far enough. We also ask what a genuinely sustainable World Cup would look like — from regional scheduling and transparent carbon accounting to heat-aware match planning, public transport, credible offsets and host-city legacy. This is not an episode about feeling guilty for watching football. It is about asking whether the world’s game can adapt to the world it is played in. Listen now for a practical, human and analytical look at football, climate risk and the future of global sport.

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Alle episoder

56 Episoder

episode S4E12: Canicule - Europe’s Heatwave Wake-Up Call cover

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7. juli 202638 min
episode S4E11: The World Cup’s Climate Problem - Can Football Go Global Without Burning the Planet? cover

S4E11: The World Cup’s Climate Problem - Can Football Go Global Without Burning the Planet?

The 2026 World Cup has kicked off - bigger than ever, more global than ever, and possibly more carbon-intensive than ever. With 48 teams, 104 matches and host cities spread across the US, Canada and Mexico, this tournament is a celebration of football’s global reach. But it also raises an uncomfortable sustainability question: can the world’s biggest sporting event keep expanding in a warming world? In this episode of Sustainability Forward, Wrishi and Carmine look beyond the pitch to explore the climate and energy story behind World Cup 2026. We discuss why fan travel is likely to dominate the tournament’s carbon footprint, why using existing stadiums is positive but not enough, how extreme heat and humidity could affect players and fans, and whether FIFA’s sustainability strategy goes far enough. We also ask what a genuinely sustainable World Cup would look like — from regional scheduling and transparent carbon accounting to heat-aware match planning, public transport, credible offsets and host-city legacy. This is not an episode about feeling guilty for watching football. It is about asking whether the world’s game can adapt to the world it is played in. Listen now for a practical, human and analytical look at football, climate risk and the future of global sport.

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2. juni 202619 min
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19. mai 202627 min
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In this episode of Sustainability Forward, we speak with Jennifer Motles, Chief Sustainability Officer at Philip Morris International, about what sustainability leadership looks like inside a complex global business undergoing transformation. Jennifer shares her journey into sustainability leadership and explains how she sees the role of a CSO: not as a side function, but as a driver of long-term value creation, resilience, and business transformation. The conversation explores why sustainability must start with a company’s most material impacts, how systems change requires action far beyond one company alone, and why transformation should be understood not as a project with a clear end point, but as continuous “change in motion.” We also discuss what it takes to drive change across a large organisation, how senior leadership alignment shapes progress, and why credibility comes from outcomes, evidence, and transparency around both achievements and limitations. Jennifer offers a candid perspective on trade-offs, accountability, and the realities of working on difficult sustainability challenges where change is often slower and messier than outside observers expect. This episode will be especially relevant for sustainability professionals, business leaders, and anyone interested in how real transformation happens inside large organisations. Topics covered: * Jennifer Motles’ journey into sustainability leadership * Why sustainability matters in the context of business transformation * Systems change and the role of business in tackling complex challenges * How to drive change across strategy, operations, and leadership * Credibility, accountability, and evidence in sustainability * Why transparency about trade-offs and limitations matters * Advice for people trying to create meaningful change inside complex organisations A thoughtful episode on leadership, realism, and why the hard work of sustainability happens from within.

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