Cancelled races, fainting players: How climate change affects sports
Cancelled races and fainted players: Climate change effects sports Image: REUTERS/Bobby Yip
As a professional ultrarunner, who competes at distances longer than a marathon, Clare Gallagher has tackled plenty of challenges, from mountains to heat.
But none have been as much of a threat to her career as the U.S. West's worsening forest fires which, fuelled in part by stronger droughts linked to climate change effects, have led to choking air across big swathes of the region each summer.
Fires and poor air quality cancelled two major races, last November and in February, said the 27-year-old, who lives in Colorado.
"Megafires are becoming more common. Races are getting cancelled at a much higher rate than in the past," Gallagher told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"As a professional runner, it's crazy. Those were the only two races I had on my calendar in those winter months and it basically knocked my racing schedule to zero," she said.
As the planet heats up, competing in - or even watching - many outdoor sports is becoming increasingly challenging as climate change effects bring harsher heatwaves, more intense rain, greater fire risks and other threats.
As heatwaves hospitalise players in sports from tennis to cricket, competitions are cancelled due to extreme weather, and winter sports try to cope with less snow and ice, sporting bodies have begun eyeing ways to adapt to the changing climate.
CLIMATE CHANGE EFFECTS ARE APPARENT WITH THE HEAT
The World Meteorological Organization said in June that 2019 was on track to be among the world's hottest years on record - another record year in a string of them over the last five years. That is worrying officials planning events from the 2020 Summer Olympics in Japan to the 2022 soccer World Cup in Qatar.
A scorching heatwave in Japan last summer prompted Tokyo's Olympics organisers to plan an earlier start time for the event's marathon race and to cover the course with a reflective layer to try to cut pavement temperatures by up to 8 degrees Celsius (14F).
Organisers were also looking at ways to keep spectators cool with tents, fans and sprays of cooling mist.
Qatar, in turn, is aiming to hold the next soccer World Cup - normally a summer event - during the winter, in November and December, to avoid the worst of the region's steamy heat. It will also install cooling technology in stadiums to combat these climate change effects.
"The sporting body needs to provide those provisions so (fans) don't get ill or hospitalised," said Kate Sambook, a climate researcher at Britain's University of Leeds.
But the Olympics and soccer aren't the only sports struggling with heat.
Last January, during a match in Australia when temperatures hit 42C (107F), England's cricket captain Joe Root was sent to hospital with exhaustion and dehydration.
At the U.S. Open last August in New York, meanwhile, a tennis fan collapsed in the stands and several players requested medical attention during their matches as temperatures soared above 32C (90F) amid crushing humidity.
As a result, the United States Tennis Association imposed special rules to allow players a 10-minute break between the second and third sets under such conditions.
The World Health Organization has said heat stress linked to climate change effects is likely to cause 38,000 extra deaths a year worldwide between 2030 and 2050, as it worsens existing health problems and provokes heat stroke and exhaustion.
SOGGY
In Britain, golf, cricket and soccer are also suffering from wetter weather linked to effects of climate change, according to a 2018 study by the Climate Coalition, a British campaign group.
More downpours meant pitches and fairways were more likely to be soggy or unplayable, the study said.
"There's definitely a trend that we're seeing where sport is being affected by climate change" - something that has "significant financial repercussions," said Sambook, who co-authored the report.
The England and Wales Cricket Board said 27% of England's home One Day International games since 2000 had been played with reduced overs due to rain disruptions, the study noted.
When heavy storms hit the country in 2015-16, the cricket board spent about a million pounds ($1.25 million) in 2016, and 1.6 million pounds in 2017 to fix facilities and to support affected clubs, the report said.
Extreme weather due to climate change effects also caused the cancellation of 25 Football League fixtures during the 2015-16 season, it said.
Major national football leagues offered about 750,000 pounds to help flood-affected clubs that season, while the Football Association, Britain's soccer body, spent 48 million pounds to weather-proof pitches across the country, the report added.
Niclas Svenningsen, who heads the Climate Neutral Now initiative under the U.N. climate secretariat, said sport's global appeal could be a way to drive more urgency for action on climate change.
"Sports ... has a very big potential to be part of the solution" both by cutting its own emissions and creating demand to deal with climate threats, Svenningsen said.
The secretariat launched an initiative last December to get sporting groups to reduce their climate impact. Nearly 50 bodies have signed up so far, it said, including tennis, soccer, ice hockey, sailing and the Olympics.
Svenningsen hopes the signatories will host climate neutral sporting events by having matches close to public transport, reducing plastic waste and using renewable energy at their facilities.
"The reach of sport is tremendous. There are more people watching sports games than listening to politics. We don't want to preach to the converted," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview.
CLIMATE CHANGE AFFECTS HOST CITY SELECTION
The International Olympic Committee said climate change is now an underlying factor in terms of host city selection and how the games will run in the future.
"We are starting to live in the consequences of climate change effects. Summers are getting hotter, winters are getting shorter. Snow is being found at higher locations," said Michelle Lemaitre, the IOC's head of sustainability.
"It is going to be a problem in the future, and we need to start addressing it now," she said in an interview.
By 2050, less than half of the 21 cities that have hosted the Winter Olympics will be cold enough to host the games again, according to a 2018 study by Canada's University of Waterloo.
And in the 2080s, that number will whittle down to just four cities - Calgary in Canada, China's Beijing, Albertville in France and Salt Lake City in the United States - if climate change effects are not curbed and temperatures rise 4.4C above pre-industrial levels, the study said.
That is well above the international goal, agreed in 2015, of holding average global temperature rise to "well below" 2C (3.6F), and ideally 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
"You can essentially kiss winter sports goodbye in the not-too-distant future. You can basically only have winter sports in high-altitude alpine regions for a very limited period of time in the year," Svenningsen said.
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