University of Reading: Reading FC and Uni strike up sustainability partnership

The University of Reading and Reading Football Club are ‘partnering for the planet’ to help the club take steps towards minimising its environmental impact and improve its sustainability.

The partnership is being announced to mark #ShowYourStripes Day 2022 today (21 June), which sees which sees thousands of people and organisations share a climate change infographic created by University of Reading climate scientist Professor Ed Hawkins every year on the summer solstice.

Reading FC will be supported by the University to aim to deliver a 10-point plan to begin reducing the club’s carbon footprint, including investigating solar panel options at its stadium and supporting fans to recycle more on matchdays.

The University will offer the knowledge and expertise of its sustainability team and researchers to assist the club in making progress, with the help of its loyal fanbase.

Positive steps
Professor Hawkins said: “I love that Reading FC is using the climate stripes to start its own conversation around sustainability and raise awareness of their important message among its large fanbase.

“The steps the club is seeking to take are positive and we are pleased as a University to be joining forces with people across Reading in a new way to make the town greener.”

Tim Kilpatrick, Commercial Director at Reading Football Club, said: “This is the beginning of a long journey, not an ego-trip. We may not be perfect but, much like the majority of our fans in our stands, we can be better and help achieve a brighter future for our planet.

“We hope this partnership inspires more climate conversations and that through action at the stadium and the buy in from Reading fans everywhere, we can all play our part.”

Members of the University’s sustainability team held a workshop at Reading’s Select Car Leasing Stadium in May to identify opportunities for the club to make immediate improvements in its sustainability and build upon what it is already doing well.

The club’s ground staff already use electric mowers to maintain its pitches, a transition towards LED lighting at both the stadium and training ground complex is under way, and matchday bus travel is heavily subsidised to encourage fans to leave their cars at home.

As a result of the workshops, the club will embark on a number of wide-ranging initiatives, including:

Examining how to reduce carbon emissions in daily and matchday operations
Exploring opportunities to use technologies that generate renewable electricity or heat at the stadium and training ground
Working with Principal Partner, Select Car Leasing, to establish the viability of installing EV charging points
Improving cycle facilities for supporters and publicising them better
Presenting home and away fans with the knowledge and the tools to recycle within the concourses
Reducing paper use, recycling glass bottles, and minimising food waste levels at the stadium
Proactively monitoring the water, electricity and gas the club uses as an organisation
Implementing reusable or recyclable cup solutions from the stadium service kiosks
Sourcing food and supplies more carefully and sustainably
Educating supporters and key stakeholders in sustainability best practice
Partnering for the Planet
The climate stripes visually demonstrate how temperatures around the world have risen in recent decades, and are intended to start conversations about climate change and action that can be taken to tackle it.

Climate stripes for almost every country, as well as for some UK counties including Berkshire, can be downloaded at showyourstripes.info.

The #ShowYourStripes campaign has been supported by UN Climate Change, the World Meteorological Organisation and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, who used the stripes at COP26 in Glasgow last November. A new book on climate change by Greta Thunberg also features the stripes on its cover.