Fueling or burning the game? Football clubs, fans and energy companies ft. Leslie Mabon Podcast Por  arte de portada

Fueling or burning the game? Football clubs, fans and energy companies ft. Leslie Mabon

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.

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