2024 Paris Olympics highlight climate change's growing threat to athletes

As the Paris Olympics get underway, rising global temperatures loom large, just as they have for Games over the past decade in Beijing, Tokyo, Pyeongchang and Sochi.

Finding Olympic venues cold enough for winter events and not too warm for summer events increasingly challenges the International Olympic Committee and would-be hosts. Sweltering temperatures in recent world competitions raised serious health and safety concerns for athletes. They also sparked questions about whether the summer Games could one day become the fall or spring Games instead.

“It’s extremely noticeable how much hotter it’s gotten and how much more difficult that makes training,” said Samuel Mattis, a discus thrower on Team USA’s track and field team, who has 15 years in the sport.

Going into the Games in France, athletes and officials alike feared the country could experience a repeat of the heat wave that killed thousands last summer. For some athletes, fears of a heat wave during the Games lend new meaning to the words Olympic flame.

The quandary extends far beyond the Olympics, to athletes, coaches and spectators across the spectrum, from the professional and college level to high school and youth sports leagues.

The Olympic flame is ignited at the historic birthplace of the Olympic games in Greece on April 16, 2024.
The Olympic flame is ignited at the historic birthplace of the Olympic games in Greece on April 16, 2024.

“It’s not just Olympians who are playing in extraordinary conditions,” said Madeleine Orr, an associate professor in sport ecology at the University of Toronto in Ontario and author of “Warming Up: How Climate Change is Changing Sport." “It’s every person playing sports in every part of the world.”

In the lead-up to the Olympics, Orr and others are focusing attention on how climate change increases the dangers for all athletes.

“I’ll be damned if Paris gets all this attention for being really hot and we get no meaningful discussion beyond these games about all of our kids and everybody who plays,” Orr said.

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In June, the British Association for Sustainable Sport, the University of Portsmouth and others released a report focusing on the heat risks at the Paris Olympics. The report, "Rings of Fire," provided recommendations to athletes and sport authorities, noting global average temperatures are continuing a trend that made 2023 the hottest year in recorded history.

“The challenges of climate-change-induced extreme heat for athletes are extensive and pose risks of devastating outcomes,” Athletics Kenya president J.K. Tuwei said in the report.

Climate change and the Summer Olympics

Summer temperatures have warmed significantly since Olympians gathered in Paris a century ago in the summer of 1924, reported Climate Central, a U.S. nonprofit that co-wrote“Rings of Fire."

  • Average temperatures for July 26-Aug. 11, the dates of this year's Games, warmed 5.5 degrees.

  • Temperatures of 86 degrees or higher were reported 188 days over the past decade, compared with 69 for 1924-1933.

  • Overnight temperatures remained at 68 degrees or above 84 nights for 2014-2023, compared with only four in 1924-1933.

Paris and much of France was enduring a heat wave on Tuesday, as the nation's weather service has issued a heat alert for nearly the entire country. AccuWeather forecast a heat index of 97 degrees and humid conditions in Paris. Similar temperatures were forecast this evening in St. Etienne, where the U.S. men's soccer team plays.

Anything above 86 degrees becomes "pretty dangerous" for athletes, said Jamie Farndale, captain of Scotland's national rugby sevens team and a climate sustainability advocate.

Fortunately, the intense heat was forecast to ease by midweek, with a return to more typical summertime highs in the 80s, according to AccuWeather.

The Olympic Committee acknowledges the heat concerns, saying it’s important that event organizers plan carefully to prevent heat-related illnesses. “Providing athletes and spectators with the best and safest conditions possible are top priorities for the IOC and the entire Olympic Movement,” the committee said.

During a heat for the women's 3,000 meter steeplechase at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, the temperature in the Olympic Stadium reached 100.4 degrees on Aug. 1, 2021.
During a heat for the women's 3,000 meter steeplechase at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, the temperature in the Olympic Stadium reached 100.4 degrees on Aug. 1, 2021.

In Tokyo in 2021, the hottest Olympics in history, rugby games were rescheduled for earlier in the day and mountain biking events were held later in the day. In the "Rings of Fire" report, New Zealand Olympian Marcus Daniell, a bronze medalist in tennis, said the heat in Japan felt as if it were bordering on possibly fatal risks.

A group of medical experts working with Paris organizers developed plans to counteract high temperatures and keep competitions safe, the IOC said. Olympic officials also distributed a guide reminding athletes to prepare for the heat, training for 60 to 90 minutes a day in an environment similar to that in Paris, then guarding against heat-related illnesses.

How heat affects athletes

In a World Athletics survey of 373 of the roughly 400 competitors in its world championships last August, three-quarters of the athletes said they perceived a direct consequence to their health and performance because of climate change. Heat can hurt athletic performance in small and large ways, from sleep disruption to illness and injury.

Studies show performance for runners declines progressively as temperatures rise above the low-60s, Orr said. Athletes doing fast, explosive movements, such as tennis, running and football, see the biggest problems.

Muscle contractions produce heat, which leads to an elevated core temperature after only a few minutes of exercise, according to the IOC. If conditions allow for skin surface heat to dissipate, the core body temperature can plateau, but if not, it can strain the cardiovascular system.

“The humidity is really what adds to the heat stress on our bodies,” said Kaitlin Trudeau, a Climate Central scientist. Warmer temperatures mean air holds more moisture, 7% more for every increase of 1.8 degrees.

Humidity makes it harder for the body to sweat, nature’s way of cooling down, Trudeau said. It increases the risk of heat-related illnesses from dizziness, heat cramps, heat exhaustion and stroke, and it can put athletes in “a dangerous situation.”

Mattis said climate concerns need to be "addressed pretty urgently for sport to continue as it is.”

The temperature reached 104 degrees during the U.S. Olympic Team Trials at Hayward Field on June 27, 2021 in Eugene, Oregon during a record-breaking heat wave.
The temperature reached 104 degrees during the U.S. Olympic Team Trials at Hayward Field on June 27, 2021 in Eugene, Oregon during a record-breaking heat wave.

He pointed to the record-setting heat during the 2021 U.S. Olympic track and field trials in Oregon. Temperatures reached 110 degrees, and several athletes, spectators and coaches got sick, he said. “During competition, the track surface was even hotter.”

Heptathlete Taliyah Brooks collapsed during the event and was treated at a hospital. Months later she sued, alleging in court documents that USA Track and Field failed in its duties to protect her and other competitors and provide adequate on-site medical care for the two-day heptathlon. The lawsuit was dismissed by an Indiana court that ruled the sport body was protected by a "hold harmless" agreement Brooks signed. The case is on appeal, and oral arguments are set for Aug. 7.

The 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha, Qatar, were shifted to late September and early October, and Mattis expects that to happen more often for the safety of athletes and fans, he said. "I think in a lot of places in the U.S. and around the world, these summertime competitions, unless they’re held in the middle of the night, are going to become essentially impossible.”

Climate change concerns growing for youth sports

From professional sports to colleges, high schools and youth sports, governing bodies are being urged to change rules because of heat ? for example, adding flexibility for hydration breaks and other cooling strategies.

Youth sports will need to “fundamentally change,” said Claudia Benitez-Nelson, a professor in the school of the Earth, Ocean and Environment at the University of South Carolina and member of Science Moms, a group of climate scientists working to educate parents.

“This heat is not natural, and we now need to adjust for these increasing temperatures,” said Benitez-Nelson, a lifelong athlete who played soccer in college and has coached youth sports as a parent.

An increase of 1 to 2 degrees may not seem like a lot, Benitez-Nelson said, but typically if a person’s temperature goes up 2 degrees, “we have a fever, we go to the doctor, we’re sick.”

It’s important to remember that children and even teenagers “are not little adults,” she said. “Their metabolisms are higher,” and it’s important to be aware of symptoms such as muscle cramps, nausea and vomiting that are associated with extreme heat exposure.

People who participate in sports or who have children in sports need to go to their state and regional associations with their concerns, she said. “We need to make allowances and think very strategically about how we are going to allow our children or teenagers, our collegiate athletes, to participate in these sports in a safe manner.”

Some of the adaptations to warmer temperatures are going to disrupt long-standing sport traditions, Orr and Benitez-Nelson said.

For example, it may strain school transportation systems and parents already juggling busy schedules, Benitez-Nelson said. “We’re not going to be able to have our practices from 3 to 5. We're really going to have to think about having them later, and you're going to need to implement mandatory hydration breaks.”

Such changes will require “a little bit of negotiating and getting people on board, but it's not complicated and it would avoid most of these worst-case scenarios,” Orr said.

Setting a higher bar to protect athletes and fans

Orr is concerned pro sports teams already are adapting without telling fans what’s happening behind the scenes, giving the “expectation that it’s totally fine to play in these conditions, and it’s probably not,” she said.

“The Chiefs last year had just an absolutely absurd season from the climate standpoint and somehow won (the Super Bowl), but only because they have all the resources in the world,” Orr said. “Your 16-year-old playing high school football doesn’t have those resources, and that’s why we see kids dying of heatstroke.”

Heat-related deaths and illnesses are notoriously underreported, experts say. Randy Eichner, a sports physician and professor emeritus at the University of Oklahoma, found in a 2023 study that three college football players had died within five years in Kansas, all of them 19-year-old defensive linemen. He also reported a case when six players at a college football camp in Georgia were taken to a hospital after one practice during a heat wave last summer.

An average of 2.2 exertional heatstroke deaths were reported from 2014 to 2023 among football players in youth, school, college and professional sports, according to the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Continued safety efforts surrounding practicing in hot weather are urgently needed," the center said in its annual report in 2023.

Provisions for athletes, such as misting fans and cooling tubs, are a significant step to address the problems, but they don’t offer protection or relief for spectators and officials, Orr said. Equity is also a concern, she said. Youth sports teams in affluent areas may have more resources and trainers who know how to use cooling tubs and equipment, she said, while others may not have the same access.

The safety bar also needs to be higher, taking into consideration whether multiple athletes might need medical attention, she said. The threshold can’t just be “no one is going to die. That can’t be the marker of a successful race.”

Dinah Voyles Pulver covers climate and the environment for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] or @dinahvp.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 2024 Olympics: Climate change poses growing threat to athletes