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Football Meets Climate Reality: Inside the Environmental Risks of FIFA World Cup 2026

The image shows a podcast cover image in the centre with a woman's face and the words 'The Climate of Sport Special, with Claire Poole', the cover sits on a backdrop of neon yellow and pink in the top half, with images of microphones in a podcast studio,

The Climate of Sport Podcast Cover: FIFA World Cup 2026 Special for Earth Day

Sponsorship and broadcast pressure, fan engagement, climate risk and how host cities are shaping legacy at FIFA World Cup 2026 on The Climate of Sport podcast

Climate change is going to make the playing, the watching of football..much harder, much more expensive, much more difficult than it has been in the past.”
— David Goldbatt, author, journalist, academic
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM, April 22, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- On Earth Day 2026, a special episode of The Climate of Sport podcast delivers a powerful, deep dive into the risks surrounding the FIFA World Cup 2026 driven by a changing climate, from commercial and broadcast risk, to player and fan health.

“Everyone wants to be at the World Cup. It’s the greatest show on earth. It is humanity’s collective festival,” says podcast guest, David Goldblatt. But that global appeal comes at a cost. “The World Cup has become a festival of overconsumption… this World Cup is going to be the most polluting sporting event in history,” shares Scientists For Global Responsibility Director, Dr Stuart Parkinson.

With an expanded 48-team format and matches spread across Canada, Mexico, and the United States, the scale of the tournament is larger than ever before. That scale is central to the environmental challenge. “The massive challenge is just the sheer scale of this event,” shares Meghna Tare, sustainability lead at host city Dallas.

Climate risk is emerging as a defining factor. Extreme heat, humidity, and weather volatility at host cities such as thunder and lightning storms, hurricanes or even wildfire smoke, are no longer theoretical, we've seen them very recently and they are critical operational risks. “It shook a lot of people up to see the Club World Cup impacted so heavily last year,” says Dr Madeleine Orr of University of Toronto referencing FIFA Club World Cup 2025, “and yet we haven’t seen the adaptations that we would be looking for.”

From heat delays to severe storms, match disruption has the potential to ripple across every layer of the tournament. For spectators, both in-stadium and at home, suspended matches undermine the core product - certainty, flow, and spectacle. A game paused indefinitely doesn’t just interrupt play, it disrupts fan experience, dwell time, and spending patterns, with knock-on effects for hospitality venues, sponsors, and local businesses relying on predictable match windows.

For teams and competition integrity, the impact is equally significant. Extended delays can alter performance dynamics, cooling players down, breaking momentum, and reshaping outcomes on the pitch. What starts as a weather interruption can quickly become a competitive variable. For broadcasters and commercial partners, the stakes are even higher. Advertising inventory tied to prime-time slots becomes vulnerable, with schedule overruns or postponements threatening contractual commitments and audience delivery.

Operationally, the cost implications escalate fast. Stadium staff, from security to concessions, must be retained for longer periods, while teams face logistical complications around transport, accommodation, and tightly managed schedules. The message from podcast host Claire Poole, for organisers, partners, and fans of the FIFA World Cup 2026 is clear - build flexibility into your schedule. In a tournament of this scale, at a time of year where extreme weather can be expected, on a year that a super El Ninõ is anticipated, climate volatility isn’t a disruption to plan around, it’s a condition to plan for.

For many, this tournament represents a tipping point. “It really is going to be a line in the sand, climatically, politically, economically,” Freddie Daley of University of Sussex says on the podcast. “It feels like a tournament we’ll talk about in terms of before and after.”

However, in spite of challenges - there is also optimism about the role sport can play in accelerating climate action. “I look at these events not so much as a liability… but as an opportunity,” says Dr Jonathan Caspar of NC State University. Host cities are already implementing sustainability strategies, from low-carbon transport systems to urban legacy planning. The question is whether these efforts can match the scale of the challenge, and whether they leave a lasting impact beyond the final whistle.

Ultimately, the podcast analysis returns to a simple but powerful idea, football has an unmatched ability to bring people together across borders, culture and generations, and in an increasingly divided world, that power matters now more than ever. But whether you care about, or see climate change as a priority or not is beside the point. Its impacts are likely to shape matches, disrupt schedules, shift commercial outcomes, and could materially redefine how the FIFA World Cup 2026 is delivered to the world.

Ms Claire A Poole
Sport Positive Ltd
claire.poole@sportpositivesummit.com
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