A view from the stands of the match with fans visible in the shadows on the bottom left and the green soccer pitch on the top right, with the words "Climate justice is social justice," displayed behind the goal during the  between the Vermont Green FC and Lexington SC during the 2024 U.S. Open Cup at Virtue Field on March 19, 2024 in Burlington, Vermont.

How sports teams are turning fans into eco allies

March 11, 2026
Updated on March 24, 2026
Maddie Meyer // USSF / Getty Images for USSF

How sports teams are turning fans into eco allies

A thin haze veiled the pitch as the starting lineup took Virtue Field. The lingering smell was subtle but unmistakable: .

A sold-out crowd of more than 2,500 fans filled the bleachers that June evening to cheer on Vermont Green FC, Burlington鈥檚 semiprofessional United Soccer League 2 club. Supporters, ranging from toddlers to grandparents, donned green, wildflower-themed jerseys, their collective presence in the stands resembling a blooming meadow. The bleachers rumbled with the stomps of raucous spectators as kickoff approached.

Poor air quality from the wildfires鈥攚hich are becoming more severe due to climate change and the burning of fossil fuels鈥攚ouldn鈥檛 stop these fans from supporting their team. To the contrary, it might further entrench their fandom. That鈥檚 because Vermont Green is no ordinary soccer team. It fights for climate justice. Its mission? To 鈥.鈥

To that end, several climate and environmental groups engaged attendees at stands behind the bleachers: 350Vermont, two solar energy companies, and the Vermont River Conservancy. Even the porta-potties boasted sustainability initiatives: They were operated by the company . (鈥淭hanks for the donation,鈥 the door read. 鈥淧ee you soon.鈥)

Vermont Green FC鈥檚 leaders don鈥檛 claim to be climate experts. 鈥淥ur real expertise is running a soccer team,鈥 said team cofounder Patrick Infurna. 鈥淏ut being able to bring in the actual experts to go speak and use our platform, use our medium鈥攖hat鈥檚 where we thrive as an environmental justice organization.鈥

Infurna knows that sports alone won鈥檛 save us from climate change, but he believes they can help. That鈥檚 because people are more inspired to take action when issues are attached to the things they love. 鈥淎nd for us,鈥 he said, 鈥渢hat became soccer.鈥

And although Burlington鈥攚hich has  and is the home of progressive Sen. Bernie Sanders鈥攊s uniquely predisposed to supporting this type of team, Infurna thinks the model is replicable. 鈥淗umbly,鈥 he said, 鈥渨e hope that we can be an inspiration for any community anywhere in this country.鈥

What if Infurna鈥檚 vision came to life? It鈥檚 arguable that with deep, systemic change, professional athletics could become a considerable force for climate good,  reports. After all, sports are one of the most trusted advertising channels, which some researchers and environmental organizers insist can鈥攎ust鈥攂e harnessed for climate action. Integrating climate action into the missions of sports teams would tackle the industry鈥檚 considerable fossil fuel problem, too. It would likely mean minimizing carbon-polluting airfare, ending fossil fuel sponsorships, and reining in its considerable carbon emissions, activists and organizers say. The potential is endless.

Perhaps the biggest hurdle to a climate-healing sports world is that, unlike Vermont Green, most teams don鈥檛 have a mission to save the planet; they seek to put on a show鈥攁nd to make money doing so. But Dr. Allen Hershkowitz鈥攁n environmental scientist who has advised the New York Yankees, the National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball, the National Hockey League, and more鈥攕aid those missions share more in common than you think. Sustainability is 鈥渁n essential corporate management obligation鈥 for every team, he said. About 80 to 89% of the world wants stronger climate action, so negligence is a 鈥渂randing liability.鈥

That鈥檚 not to mention the troubling impact of climate change on sports. According to a 2023 survey from World Athletics, over three-quarters of track-and-field athletes believe . And athletes have been increasingly sounding the alarm about .

Conversely, the climate world should care about sports, Hershkowitz added. Sports hold economic power. Their business affects every sector, from food and clothing to energy and transportation. 鈥淭here are billions of dollars of advertising and market influence collectively that this sector influences,鈥 Hershkowitz said.

Then, there鈥檚 the social power. About , according to a 2023 poll. By some measures, . Fans emulate their idols on and off the court. What if they mimicked their sustainable behavior, too鈥攆or example,  did during his stint with the Miami Heat or adopting a plant-based diet like ?

鈥淚f they advertise cars and pizza,鈥 Hershkowitz asked, 鈥渨hy can鈥檛 they advertise environmental literacy?

The market influence of sports is, unfortunately, most evident when viewed through the lens of climate change鈥檚 biggest perpetrator: fossil fuels. 

Fossil fuel companies currently spend an estimated , from soccer and motorsports to badminton and handball, according to a 2024 report from the think tank New Weather Institute.

Petrostates are also big spenders: Saudi Arabia, the world鈥檚 second-biggest oil-producing country, the use of sports to distract from human rights abuses and other bad practices that could contribute to an unsavory reputation. The nation pays Argentinian soccer legend Lionel Messi , and it is slated to .

It makes sense that powerful interests would pour their coffers into sports, said Freddie Daley, a political economy researcher at the University of Sussex and campaigner with the climate groups Badvertising and Cool Down鈥攖he Sport for Climate Action Network. . Why not use them to move public opinion鈥攐r to sanitize tarnished reputations? , and , jetting to Ultimate Fighting Championship events and brandishing endorsements from many professional athletes.

鈥淪port is like an advertiser鈥檚 and a marketer鈥檚 dream,鈥 Daley said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 got all the things that you want to be associated with, whether it鈥檚 peak physical performance, muscular bodies, human achievement, human flourishing鈥攁ll these wonderful positive associations.鈥

That power doesn鈥檛 have to be wielded for the planet鈥檚 detriment, Daley said. He envisions a world where that marketing sway is used for climate action rather than planet-heating fossil fuels.

In fact, sports could be the very channel the climate world needs to engage one of its most reticent demographics: older, working-class, conservative-leaning men. This cohort has historically not been as deeply engaged with the climate movement, Daley said, and they are also a core constituency of the sports fanbase.

鈥淯nfortunately, we鈥檝e experienced the mass politicization of climate action鈥ctions that are deemed woke are slapped back,鈥 Daley said. 鈥淚 think sport is a really effective tool at cutting through that.鈥

Even for the climate-pilled, the pseudoreligious experience of fandom could combat one of climate action鈥檚 greatest hindrances: a false sense of isolation. , according to a study published last February. Yet they believe they鈥檙e part of the minority. Convincing climate-concerned folks that they鈥檙e in the majority could be a 鈥減owerful intervention,鈥 those study authors write. What better way to unite the masses than through sports?

Indeed, a study measuring fan heart rates published this June found  or what scientists call 鈥渃ollective effervescence.鈥 Sports, the authors write, 鈥渇orm and reinforce shared identities.鈥

Image
A Vermont Green FC flag waves stands out against a black background over fans during the First Round of the 2024 U.S. Open Cup at Virtue Field on March 19, 2024 in Burlington, Vermont.
Maddie Meyer // USSF / Getty Images for USSF


Nelson Mandela observed this years ago. 鈥淪port has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does,鈥 he said in a speech in 2000. 鈥淪port can create hope where once there was only despair.鈥

It is, of course, impossible to discuss climate action in sports without addressing the elephant in the room: Professional athletic leagues are considerable greenhouse gas emitters.

A business-as-usual professional league involves long-distance flights; sponsorships from high-carbon businesses like airlines, fossil fuel companies, and cryptocurrencies; and . , per a report by New Weather Institute published this year.

Put plainly, Hershkowitz said, the sports industry isn鈥檛 just a consumer鈥斺渋t鈥檚 an amplifier of the consumption message.鈥

Dr. Jules Boykoff, a former professional soccer player who now studies sports and politics at Pacific University, said that sports must reduce their emissions if they are serious about galvanizing climate action. 鈥淎ll too often, there鈥檚 a customary chasm between word and deed,鈥 Boykoff said, 鈥渂etween the claims around sustainability that teams and leagues make and the reality of their actual practices.鈥

Some athletes, like Kelvin Beachum, are calling on sports leagues to minimize their climate impact. The 13-year National Football League veteran recently joined the , which aims to propel environmental protection through sports, music, and the arts.

鈥淚鈥檓 an offensive lineman, so I know protection better than most,鈥 Beachum quipped.

Beachum sees a world where all teams incorporate sustainability into their day-to-day operations. He pointed to Climate Pledge Arena, home to the NHL鈥檚 Seattle Kraken, which is , , and .

Scottish rugby player Jamie Farndale has also used his platform鈥攁nd his master鈥檚 degree in sustainable leadership from Cambridge University鈥攖o advance climate action. The retired international captain鈥檚 graduate school thesis showed how low-carbon technologies could spread as 鈥渟ocial contagions鈥 through social collectives鈥攕ports fandoms being one of the largest of their kind in modern society. He鈥檚 now applying that research to his full-time work leading sustainability initiatives, including upending climate-polluting sponsorship models, for Hong Kong China Rugby. 鈥淚f we want to spread uptake of these technologies that we need for net zero, that we鈥檙e not spreading fast enough, sport is the best connector,鈥 Farndale said.

Farndale added that sports hold massive global influence. He pointed to , a project started by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which catalogs influential people throughout history. About half of the database鈥檚 entries before 1600 were politicians, followed by religious figures and writers. But in the twenty-first century, sports professionals have made up nearly 83% of entries. It would be a dereliction of duty not to use that influence for the greater good: 鈥淚 think sport has to be political,鈥 Farndale said.

Boykoff praises the athletes and organizations taking stances on climate change. But he noted that louder and more obstructive powers can drown them out. Systems, structures, and the people that uphold them must change for these athletes to be heard. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter how many [athletes] stand up and say, Conserve, baby, conserve, as long as you鈥檝e got somebody in the White House saying, Drill, baby, drill,鈥 Boykoff said.

Elected officials, experts in other sectors, and sports leaders need to join those athletes to translate activism into action at the necessary scale, Boykoff said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e racing against time here. We鈥檙e racing against whipsaw climate change.鈥

Indeed, scaling is top of mind for Vermont Green FC. They鈥檝e expanded and refined their operations for the 2025 season. Last year,  . Team leaders have been discussing internally how they can translate their model into a fully professional, year-round team. (USL2 teams roster college players and play only in the summer.) 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have the answer,鈥 Infurna said, but the discussion is ongoing as the team eyes future growth.

Infurna imagines a world where Vermont Green鈥檚 model was scaled to the high majors. Although some might see it as a pipe dream that NFL, NBA, or MLB teams could become significant forces for climate action, Infurna sees it differently: Not pursuing that goal is unfathomable. To illustrate, he pointed to the New York Jets鈥 and Giants鈥 MetLife Stadium, which seats some 82,500 fans.

鈥淓ighty thousand people all wearing the same shirt, all on the same page, all believing in this thing,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s I get older and observe the world in this quite dire moment that we鈥檙e in, I鈥檓 just like, man, could you imagine gathering 80,000 people together that are all in this collective thought process and not using that for something a little bit more?鈥

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Nick Lockermann #10 of Vermont Green FC huddles with his team before the Second Round of the 2024 U.S. Open Cup match against the Lexington FC at Virtue Field on April 03, 2024 in Burlington, Vermont.
Maddie Meyer // USSF / Getty Images for USSF


That Vermont Green game in June ended in a 1鈥1 draw, bringing the team to a still-unbeaten 4-1-0 record on the season. The air was sucked out of the stadium as the opposing Boston Bolts equalized with under two minutes remaining in regulation. 

The result could be seen as disappointing: The Green led for over 80 minutes and staunchly defended their goal down a player after the referee issued a red card. But Infurna doesn鈥檛 see things that way鈥攁t least not entirely. When the team鈥檚 mission is to advance climate justice, packing 2,500 people into the stands to engage with the issue is a victory.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e the type of person that鈥檚 going to get your whole mood derailed by a sports result, there鈥檚 always something to fall back on if your team has more meaning to it,鈥 Infurna said.

It鈥檚 hard to say how many Vermont Green attendees will install solar, canvas for 350Vermont, or attend a river cleanup. But it鈥檚 undeniable that every fan was engaged in community. 鈥淛ust being together is, unfortunately, a bit radical these days,鈥 Infurna said. 鈥淭his world wants to isolate us, and sports can be a counter to that.鈥

It鈥檚 also undeniable that the fans had a good time. Daley, for his part, sees value in this. Climate action needn鈥檛 be a burden or sacrifice. To the contrary. 鈥淪port is fun,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd I think climate action should be fun, too.鈥 

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