Fueling or burning the game? Football clubs, fans and energy companies ft. Leslie Mabon
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In the latest FootPol Podcast episode, Leslie Mabon, senior lecturer in environmental systems at The Open University discusses how football’s deep ties to industry reveal a bigger story about climate change, community identity, and the energy transition.
From the coalfields of Fife to the steelworks of Dortmund and Japan’s industrial clubs, football’s roots run through carbon-intensive economies. Mabon explains how clubs are now reinterpreting their industrial heritage — through shirts, banners, and community initiatives — while grappling with questions of sportswashing, ethical sponsorship, and sustainability.
The episode explores how energy and identity intersect: oil and gas companies still sponsor around half of Scotland’s Highland League teams, but a shift toward renewable energy sponsorship is under way — signalling how the game may help normalise the low-carbon transition.
As Mabon argues, football’s evolution mirrors society’s: industries that once drove emissions are now helping power the clean energy future. And while putting a wind turbine logo on a shirt won’t decarbonise a region overnight, it might just spark the conversations that do.