News

The Club World Cup in the U.S. highlighted growing concerns about extreme summer temperatures. With global warming ...
Soccer had a fierce reckoning with heat at the recently concluded FIFA Club World Cup in the United States — a sweltering ...
Teams endured extreme heat during the Club World Cup—seen as a test for how FIFA will protect players next year.
The 48-team tournament will produce around nine million tons of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a report.
As the expanded 2025 Club World Cup comes to a close, The Sporting News examines the key takeaways for FIFA and local organisers ahead of the 2026 World Cup in North America.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 will be the biggest in the tournament’s history, but also potentially the most climate-damaging. With ...
When the FIFA World Cup hits North America in June 2026, 48 teams and millions of sports fans will be traveling among venues ...
Extreme heat is becoming soccer’s most pressing challenge, as dramatically demonstrated during this summer’s FIFA Club World ...
FIFA's decision to hold the 2030 World Cup in six countries with fans flying to over 100 games will increase the tournament's carbon footprint and is at odds with the soccer governing body's ...
Fifa has faced criticism over its growing links with the fossil-fuel industry, and its decision to expand the 2026 World Cup to an unprecedented 48 teams has led some environmental campaigners to ...
Qatar inaugurates fourth FIFA World Cup 2022™ venue, Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium, in front of 50% capacity crowd. The 40,000-capacity venue will host seven matches during Qatar 2022 up to the round-of ...