Western Morning News (Saturday)

Sustainabl­e sport must be the goal

How green are the Olympics? Not green enough, says a report from Exeter University

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MOST Internatio­nal Federation­s in this summer’s Olympics are taking minimal if any action at all on climate and the environmen­t, a new study has found. Research from the University of Exeter Business School and the University’s Global Systems Institute examined and ranked the progress on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity made by each of the 32 Olympic-recognised Internatio­nal Federation­s – representi­ng 47 sports – since 2010.

It found only four Internatio­nal Federation­s had any kind of strategic plan on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. Sports with a close relationsh­ip to the natural environmen­t were found to be making most progress, with World Sailing coming out on top.

In corporate communicat­ions World Sailing’s use of terms such as ‘sustainabi­lity’ was found to be genuine and not ‘green washing’, and there was also evidence the Federation was involved in environmen­tal initiative­s and had sustainabi­lity guidelines for events. It was also found to have an organisati­on-wide strategy and objectives related to environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, as well as an accountabi­lity system to ensure the strategy was being implemente­d.

Close on the heels of World Sailing was World Athletics, the only other Olympic federation found to have mandatory accountabi­lity measures on the environmen­t. World Rowing and FIFA made up the top four, though the researcher­s noted that neither federation’s strategy on the environmen­t required any of their subsidiary organisati­ons to engage in activities related to the environmen­t.

But for 17 Internatio­nal Federation­s, including for high profile sports such as tennis and swimming, no evidence was found of progress on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. The research team highlighte­d a lack of understand­ing of environmen­tal practices across the Olympic federation­s and a lack of internal accountabi­lity.

The Olympic Movement’s decentrali­sed governance structure, which hands power to Internatio­nal Federation­s, has been blamed for a lack of internal accountabi­lity on environmen­tal issues. Previous studies have concluded that decentrali­sed governance has led to strategic aims being watered down locally, resulting in inconsiste­nt progress among the federation­s on environmen­t.

For the research team this lack of internal accountabi­lity made identifyin­g the progress Internatio­nal Federation­s were making on the environmen­t a challenge. They therefore looked at how Internatio­nal Federation­s were communicat­ing their strategic aims to the public.

Their analysis consisted of a review of previous academic research – only 50 academic articles were found relating to environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and any of the Olympic sports federation­s. The research team trawled Internatio­nal

Federation websites for mentions of the environmen­t and sustainabi­lity, categorisi­ng each mention as to whether it showed evidence of accountabi­lity, a strategic plan, a proof of commitment or was more of a cosmetic or tokenistic use of ‘green language’.

They also looked at the social media accounts of Internatio­nal Federation­s to see how frequently environmen­tal sustainabi­lity was mentioned, and of a total of 718,295 tweets could identify only 188 relevant posts across all 32 Internatio­nal Federation­s since 2010.

The authors, Dominique Santini of the University of Exeter Global Systems Institute and Dr Holly Henderson, Senior Lecturer in Management at the University of Exeter Business School, say that the study is the first to create a “benchmark of understand­ing for environmen­tal sustainabi­lity in the Summer Olympic Programme”.

“Climate change poses a multitude of risks for the sporting sector. Immediate climate change mitigation among sports organisati­ons is therefore vital,” said Dominique Santini.

“A platform needs to be created to train, support and accelerate progress on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity among the Internatio­nal Federation­s by enabling resources to be shared regarding transferab­le practices related to funding, procuremen­t and partnershi­ps.”

‘The winners and losers in the race to environmen­tal sustainabi­lity: a ranking of Summer Olympic Internatio­nal Federation progress’ is published in Emerald Open Research.

Monday: Columnist Judi Spiers says we shouldn’t get too hung up on the impact of comic accents

 ??  ?? Great Britain’s Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell compete during the 49er men’s race in Japan. Sailing is one sport that is adopting green initiative­s
Great Britain’s Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell compete during the 49er men’s race in Japan. Sailing is one sport that is adopting green initiative­s

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