CLIMATE CHANGE is threatening to disrupt grassroots sport in the UK by forcing games to be postponed, which could lead to fewer athletes and fans wanting to take part, a report has found.
Extreme weather has prevented more than 130,000 cricket overs from going ahead in the past decade, while sports clubs and events are themselves producing emissions contributing to the increasingly severe heatwaves and downpours stopping games, analysts from the British Association of Sustainable Sport (Basis) said.
Five named storms have already hit the UK this winter season, with Storm Babet cancelling all but two games in the top tier of Scottish football on October 21, while a golf club in Swansea was flooded in September for the second time in three years.
The UK has already warmed on average by 1.4C since 1884, said Professor Ed Hawkins, a climate scientist from the University of Reading.
Writing in the Basis report, he said the UK will continue getting warmer and wetter, with more intense downpours during the autumn and winter and more extreme heatwaves in the summer.
The rising sea level, which has already increased by 20cm around the UK, will expose more coastal grounds and pitches to more frequent flooding.
On January 1 2023, North Yorkshire’s Whitby Town FC, which is metres from the sea, was forced to postpone a local derby, at a substantial financial cost, because of heavy rain, Basis said.
Chris Boardman, Sport England chairman, said: “Climate change is an existential threat to the planet, and as a sport and physical activity sector we are intrinsically connected.
“Whether it’s flooded pitches, water quality or extreme heat, few things have such an ability to depress physical activity nor widen equality of access than a heating world.”
Clubs in the lower football leagues, like Whitby Town, are less able to cope with extreme weather because they have fewer resources to protect their grounds.
Research from the Climate Coalition in 2021 found that around 62,500 amateur football matches were being cancelled or delayed through extreme weather each year.
In a poll commissioned by not-for-profit Round Our Way for the Basis report, 40 per cent of football spectators and players said they have experienced weather extremes associated with climate change in the past year.
This figure rose to 60 per cent for fans and players in cricket and 64 per cent in golf.
It also found that 63 per cent of people said they would back a new independent football regulator that would consider the impact of climate change on football and that the FA, Premier League and EFL should enforce climate action in the sport.
The Basis report authors want better data collection on the impacts of climate change on UK sport and more funding to help clubs adapt to the changing conditions, as well as a partnership between all governing bodies that would enable better co-operation towards mitigating the impact.
Women’s Cricket World Cup winner Tammy Beaumont said: “Beyond just the loss of missed games in the immediate term, we’re risking longer-term impacts on sport too.
“The more games are called off, the more likely it is that players will lose interest in playing the sport.
“If the cricket season is spent mainly watching it rain or playing on dry, poor wickets, players may leave the sport for a game they get more opportunity in — or stop sport altogether.”
Round Our Way director Roger Harding said: “Every cancelled game is a lost opportunity to bring people together, keep people fit and make some money to keep clubs afloat.
“Sadly this is one of the ways climate change is really starting to bite in the UK, and it often hits working-class communities hardest.”