The Guardian (USA)

World Cup 2030 to be hosted in Spain, Portugal, Morocco … and South America

- Paul MacInnes

The 2030 World Cup is to be played on three continents after Morocco, Portugal and Spain won the race to host the 48-team tournament but Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay were handed the opening three matches.

The decision, which caught even seasoned Fifa watchers by surprise, means that World Cup 2030 will involve teams playing in six countries, each of which will qualify automatica­lly. The World Cup has never been played on more than one continent before and proposals for a tournament to be played over thousands of miles was met with shock by climate groups.

The decision, and the timing, appeared to pave the way for Saudi Arabia to host the World Cup in 2034 and within hours the kingdom unveiled its bid for that tournament. The Saudis had once been expected to lead a bid alongside Greece and Egypt for 2030, only to stand aside earlier this year. Now, with Fifa inviting bids from Asia and Oceania to host in 2034, the Saudi Football Federation said it intends to bid alone.

Fifa settled on the ambitious 2030 proposal at a virtual meeting of its council on Wednesday. It will need to be confirmed in a vote taken by all 211 Fifa members in the final months of next year. “In a divided world, Fifa and football are uniting,” said Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, describing the Morocco, Portugal and Spain bid as “a great message of peace, tolerance and inclusion”.

Fifa is committed to rotating World Cups between confederat­ions and although the Uefa/Caf bid was the favourite for 2030, Conmebol – the South American confederat­ion – has not hosted a World Cup since 2014 and was looking to commemorat­e the centenary of the first World Cup, held in Uruguay in 1930. Infantino said the first match of the 2030 tournament would be held at the Estádio Centenário in Montevideo, the same venue as the first World Cup.

It is anticipate­d that Saudi Arabia will not be the only bidders for 2034 with Australia an interested party, perhaps alongside Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous country. There may also be a proposal from China, which once set its sights on hosting the World Cup by 2030. But the Saudis, who are spending billions on football through the Public Investment Fund, appear to be in pole position.

Yasser al-Misehal, the president of the Saudi Football Federation, said: “We believe the time is right for Saudi Arabia to host the Fifa World Cup. Our bid is driven by a love for the game and a desire to see it grow in every corner of the world.”

Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince and prime minister, described the bid as “a reflection of the country’s progress in all sectors … the kingdom has quickly emerged as a leading hub and an internatio­nal destinatio­n for hosting major events thanks to its rich cultural heritage, economic strength and the ambition of its people.”

The 2030 announceme­nt was met with dismay by climate groups meanwhile. Earlier this year a Swiss regulator ruled that Fifa misled fans over claims that the Qatar World Cup would be a carbon-neutral event. Freddie Daley of the New Weather Institute, one of the organisati­ons behind the challenge, said the 2030 plans showed Fifa was “continuing to prioritise the growth of the game ahead of the climate”.

“We’re worried by this announceme­nt and how it will be delivered in line with their targets and internatio­nal targets around driving down emissions”, Daley said. “Football has huge power to bring people on the journey to net zero, but Fifa are saying one thing and doing another. How can we take them at their word, when this tournament will mean more emissions, more flights and more climate damages?”

Carbon Market Watch, whose analysis of Fifa’s claims over Qatar first exposed a gap between rhetoric and reality, said they were waiting to see full details of how the tournament might work. “Fifa’s decision to host the 2030 World Cup across six countries could be, from a climate perspectiv­e, a step in the right direction or a recipe for disaster,” a spokespers­on said.

“It will all depend on how honestly and how well Fifa tackles the tournament’s carbon and ecological footprint. If the distribute­d nature of the tournament means that little to no new infrastruc­ture will be built and fans will travel shorter distances more sustainabl­y to attend games only in their country or nearby countries, then this could be helpful. However, if it means even more internatio­nal and interconti­nental travel and even more white elephant infrastruc­ture, then it will be hugely problemati­c.”

Football Supporters Europe, who this year began a closer working relationsh­ip with Uefa, said: “Fifa continues its cycle of destructio­n against the greatest tournament on earth. Horrendous for supporters, disregards the environmen­t and rolls the red carpet out to a host for 2034 with an appalling human rights record. It’s the end of the World Cup as we know it.”

 ?? Photograph: Jorge Sáenz/AP ?? Left to right: Paraguay FA president Robert Harrison, Fifa delegate Ignacio Alonso, and Conmebol president Alejandro Domínguez and vice-president Claudio Tapia with the World Cup at a ceremony in Luque, Paraguay.
Photograph: Jorge Sáenz/AP Left to right: Paraguay FA president Robert Harrison, Fifa delegate Ignacio Alonso, and Conmebol president Alejandro Domínguez and vice-president Claudio Tapia with the World Cup at a ceremony in Luque, Paraguay.

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