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Climate Action Delay Discourses in the Sports Sector : Insights From Interviews With Athletes and Staff

Stegmann, Pascal and Suter, Manuel LU (2026) In Sustainable Development
Abstract

There is a major contradiction between the current model of international elite sport and efforts to mitigate climate change. This study investigates climate action delay discourses within the sports sector by analyzing 28 semi-structured interviews with athletes and sports federation employees. Based on the two climate delay discourse typologies of Lamb et al. (2020, Global Sustainability, 3: e17) and Cherry et al. (2024, Global Environmental Change 87: 102875), we identify and confirm several discourses that justify inaction or inadequate efforts toward climate change mitigation in the sports sector. System-related narratives emphasized being trapped in the climate-damaging system of international elite sport and stressed the need for... (More)

There is a major contradiction between the current model of international elite sport and efforts to mitigate climate change. This study investigates climate action delay discourses within the sports sector by analyzing 28 semi-structured interviews with athletes and sports federation employees. Based on the two climate delay discourse typologies of Lamb et al. (2020, Global Sustainability, 3: e17) and Cherry et al. (2024, Global Environmental Change 87: 102875), we identify and confirm several discourses that justify inaction or inadequate efforts toward climate change mitigation in the sports sector. System-related narratives emphasized being trapped in the climate-damaging system of international elite sport and stressed the need for leadership from other stakeholders inside and outside the sports sector. These system-related narratives contradict other identified discourses that perceive sports climate responsibility as low and suggest an emphasis on voluntary climate actions. Narratives frequently also point to a lack of resources as a barrier to climate action. The discourses raised differences between athletes and sports federation employees. The study highlights the need to address both cognitive and structural dimensions of climate action delay and outlines approaches to challenge these discourses within the sports sector.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
climate mitigation, communication and education, human behaviour, policies, politics and governance, system control and optimization
in
Sustainable Development
publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
external identifiers
  • scopus:105028968055
ISSN
0968-0802
DOI
10.1002/sd.70747
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
33b2b875-f18b-4917-886d-4819095a4d69
date added to LUP
2026-02-23 15:30:22
date last changed
2026-02-23 15:30:46
@article{33b2b875-f18b-4917-886d-4819095a4d69,
  abstract     = {{<p>There is a major contradiction between the current model of international elite sport and efforts to mitigate climate change. This study investigates climate action delay discourses within the sports sector by analyzing 28 semi-structured interviews with athletes and sports federation employees. Based on the two climate delay discourse typologies of Lamb et al. (2020, Global Sustainability, 3: e17) and Cherry et al. (2024, Global Environmental Change 87: 102875), we identify and confirm several discourses that justify inaction or inadequate efforts toward climate change mitigation in the sports sector. System-related narratives emphasized being trapped in the climate-damaging system of international elite sport and stressed the need for leadership from other stakeholders inside and outside the sports sector. These system-related narratives contradict other identified discourses that perceive sports climate responsibility as low and suggest an emphasis on voluntary climate actions. Narratives frequently also point to a lack of resources as a barrier to climate action. The discourses raised differences between athletes and sports federation employees. The study highlights the need to address both cognitive and structural dimensions of climate action delay and outlines approaches to challenge these discourses within the sports sector.</p>}},
  author       = {{Stegmann, Pascal and Suter, Manuel}},
  issn         = {{0968-0802}},
  keywords     = {{climate mitigation; communication and education; human behaviour; policies, politics and governance; system control and optimization}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{John Wiley & Sons Inc.}},
  series       = {{Sustainable Development}},
  title        = {{Climate Action Delay Discourses in the Sports Sector : Insights From Interviews With Athletes and Staff}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sd.70747}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/sd.70747}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}