How Green Is The Beautiful Game? An Overview Of Environmental Regulation In Football

Football has often been described as “the world’s game,” with FIFA having a boot-print in 211 FIFA-affiliated national associations worldwide[1]. However its global reach comes with significant social responsibility: football can and should play a central role in helping tackle the world’s challenges.
One such challenge is tackling environmental issues, be it plastic waste, water conservation or climate change from carbon emissions. And the need is great: by 2050, forecasts anticipate that over 570 of the world’s low-lying coastal cities will be impacted by the projected 0.5 metre rise in sea levels[2], which in sporting terms mean Premier League clubs such as Chelsea, West Ham and Southampton suffering from partial or total annual flooding of their stadiums (see the Rapid Transition Alliance’s[3] 2020 Report, “Playing Against the Clock”[4]).
This article explores how environmental law principles are adopted in the football industry and how it is currently regulated from a sustainability perspective. It considers:
- Sources of environmental law
- Football’s growing carbon footprint
- Examples of environmental initiatives in European football
- International federations
- National governing bodies
- Clubs
- Players
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- Tags: Environmental Law | Europe | FIFA | Football | Governance | Paris Agreement | Regulation | Sustainability | Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union | UEFA | UK | United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
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Written by
Conor Daly
Conor is an associate at Centrefield LLP.
He is a commercial lawyer with experience in debt finance, financial regulation and a broad range of commercial contracts. He also holds a Postgraduate Certificate in Intellectual Property and Sport awarded by the University of London and is dual qualified, having qualified in Ireland