Sat. Dec 28th, 2024

The Univeristy of Maryland’s football traveled more than 2,000 miles to face a new Big Ten foe in the University of Oregon on Nov. 9. The four new West Coast teams in the conference spread its reach coast to coast, and led to a sharp increase in carbon emissions from Big Ten football travel. Photo by Capital News Service

By Shaun Chornobroff
Capital News Service/Shirley Povich Center for Sports Journalism

Carbon dioxide emissions from Big Ten football team travel for regular-season conference games more than tripled from 2023 to 2024, when the conference added a quartet of West Coast schools, a Capital News Service analysis found.

Carbon dioxide is one of the major contributors to global warming, a greenhouse gas that traps heat in the planet’s atmosphere, and global air travel was estimated to be responsible for 2.5% of all carbon emissions and 4% of global warming, in a study published by Our World in Data in April.

“As the Big Ten grows and its carbon-intensive activities increase, they’re contributing to higher levels of carbon emissions, so they’re fueling the heating of the planet,” said Joseph Nevins, a professor of geography at Vassar College and one of the pioneers of Flying Less, a project aimed at reducing air travel in higher education. “They’re making contributions to increasing forest fires in the U.S. Southwest and Canada, growing levels of air pollution, which have direct impacts on people’s bodily well-being.”

The Big Ten did not mention environmental impact as a consideration in making its football schedule.

“Our priority in football scheduling is to balance geography and travel to create compelling matchups in a flexible format that maximize opportunities for Big Ten teams to access the expanded College Football Playoff and win National Championships,” the Big Ten said in a statement to CNS in August.

In 2010, the Big Ten consisted of 11 mostly Midwestern schools: Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State, Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa. Nebraska joined in 2011, while Maryland and Rutgers became members in 2014, expanding the Big Ten’s footprint to the East Coast. Carbon emissions from Big Ten travel rose 6% when Maryland and Rutgers joined the conference, per an Arizona State study published in May.

In 2024, the Big Ten went coast-to-coast with the addition of USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington. USC and UCLA are more than 2,400 miles from Rutgers. When UCLA traveled to New Jersey to face Rutgers on Oct. 19, the football team’s travel emitted more than 150,000 kilograms of carbon. Six days later, the Scarlet Knights headed west to face USC for a nationally televised game that started at 11 p.m. on the East Coast. Those two trips emitted the most carbon dioxide of any Big Ten games.

Each of the Big Ten’s new members is traveling at least twice as much this season as last, with UCLA and Washington traveling more than three times as much in 2024 for regular-season conference games as they did in their final seasons in the West Coast-based Pac-12.

Of the 18 Big Ten schools, 17 will see a rise in carbon emissions from last year. Only Purdue will see a drop, emitting nearly 14,000 fewer kilograms of carbon this year than in 2023.

The four West Coast schools are the Big Ten’s biggest emitters, with Washington leading all conference schools with more than 500,000 kilograms of carbon dioxide emissions. USC, UCLA, Washington and Oregon increased carbon dioxide emissions by at least 250,000 kilograms in the shift from Pac-12 to the Big Ten. Penn State is projected to emit 275,000 more kilograms, followed by Rutgers’ 260,000 and Maryland’s 238,000.

“Is it necessary? Are there alternative ways of doing things that would not only radically cut our carbon emissions, but produce a more socially and environmentally just world?” asked Nevins, who got his doctorate from UCLA.

The Seattle Seahawks of the NFL will travel an average of 3,227.62 miles round-trip for road games this season, the most in the league, according to Bill Speros of Bookies.com. The University of Washington football team, which plays its games less than seven miles from the Seahawks, will average 100 miles more per trip than its NFL neighbors.

In 2023, the Big Ten announced that each football program would face all other programs at least twice in a four-year span. Between 2024 and 2028, the Big Ten has scheduled 33 cross-country trips among the seven schools on the coasts (Penn State, Rutgers, Maryland, Washington, Oregon, USC, UCLA).

“We develop our scheduling formats with input and feedback from school administrators, faculty representatives, medical professionals and head coaches looking at the potential impact on academics, health, safety, rest, recovery, and overall competitive equity,” the Big Ten’s August statement said. “We continue to evaluate our formats and evolve as needed.”

Kerry Kenny, the chief operating officer of the Big Ten, told ESPN in 2023 that a divisional model restricted the regularity of compelling football games. Oregon and Penn State, the two teams who met in the Big Ten title game on Dec. 7, are scheduled to play each other three times in the next four seasons, which would not have been the case with East and West divisions.

In its first season with the four new schools, the Big Ten had four teams qualify for the College Football Playoff, the most of any conference. After an undefeated regular season and Big Ten title, Oregon is the top seed in the 12-team tournament.

An Oct. 12 game between Oregon and Ohio State, two of the top three teams in the nation at the time, averaged 10.4 million viewers and peaked at 13.4 million in the final minutes of an eventual Oregon victory. It was the most-watched Big Ten prime-time regular-season game since 2008, according to a press release from Comcast. Team travel for the game resulted in more than 125,000 kilograms of carbon being released.

How emissions were calculated

Capital News Service calculated distances from nearby major airports to find the carbon emissions total. For UCLA’s Oct. 19 game against Rutgers, for example, CNS used the distance from Los Angeles International Airport to Newark Liberty International Airport. For games where teams likely used bus travel, CNS used the distance between stadiums.

CNS focused only on football team travel for this analysis due to the sport’s once-a-week travel patterns. Most other sports play multiple times a week and may have less predictable travel schedules.

“The ultimate variable, in my opinion, is the games are better, the matchups are better, and certainly far more important,” said Tim Brando, a longtime broadcaster for Fox Sports.

Included in Brando’s 2024 slate was a Sept. 27 game between the University of Washington and Rutgers. Washington emitted nearly 149,000 kilograms of carbon dioxide to fly for the Friday night game that peaked at 2.5 million viewers as Rutgers, which made the game its annual blackout, escaped with a 3-point victory.

“That was probably the most intensity and the greatest crowd [Rutgers] had for a home game in Piscataway in years,” Brando said. “In large measure, it was because Washington was the opponent, a team that was playing for the National Championship just a year before.”

What’s happening in the Big Ten is representative of the new age of college football. Divisionless conferences are the new norm. The only FBS conference split into divisions this season was the Sun Belt Conference.

“The only option to get to most of these competitions is to fly, which means that necessarily there are more flights,” said Madeleine Orr, an assistant professor of sport ecology at the University of Toronto and a University of Minnesota graduate. “It’s a growth strategy, as opposed to a reductionist strategy and a climate strategy.”

As awareness around the impact of air travel grows, more major sports teams and organizations are investing in carbon offsets. Carbon offsets have become a trendy way for major corporations to compensate for emissions. They do so by investing in efforts that lower gases released into the atmosphere, theoretically balancing the carbon dioxide they emit.

In 2019, the NHL purchased the equivalent of more than 3.8 million pounds (more than 1.72 million kilograms) of carbon offsets to counter its playoff travel. In the five years since then, the NFL’s Houston Texans, English soccer giant Manchester United and even the Australian national men’s and women’s soccer teams have bought offsets to make up for travel.

“In order for that offset to work effectively, the offset has to immediately cancel out … (those) emissions I’ve generated,” Nevins said. “You also have to be able to verify that it’s taking place and that the cut in emissions persists over time.”

Most colleges and universities have sustainability departments that evaluate the schools’ practices and how to lessen their environmental impact. In the Big Ten, in addition to sustainability departments, schools such as the University of Illinois and Michigan have programs focused on sustainable aviation.

The University of Maryland has a pledge to offset all air travel. While Maryland is offsetting all its travel, according to a school dashboard, the number of miles athletics traveled via commercial and chartered flights from 2021 to 2023 increased by 51%. The dashboard has not been updated for 2024, the first year that would include the West Coast teams in the Big Ten.

“What we should be concerned with is: What are they teaching their students, right? What are they teaching the communities in the world?” Nevins asked. “They are normalizing a behavior that is counter to the direction you need to be heading, and they are opening themselves up to accusations of hypocrisy.”

Some good climate news, for once: Md. leads in carbon emissions reductions

On Nov. 20, the University of Michigan’s Center for Sustainable Studies released a paper looking at the impact of the school’s football travel. Paige Greenberg and Molly Russell, the authors, found conflict between the university’s messaging and the school’s athletics travel.

“While U-M has positioned itself as a leader in sustainability within higher education, the recent Big Ten expansion contradicts this image and poses significant challenges to the University’s commitments,” the paper said.

The 2024 season is the second of media contracts that the Big Ten has with CBS, Fox and NBC, which total more than $8 billion and will run through the 2030 season, according to the Sports Business Journal. In the 2023 fiscal year, the conference paid most of its members more than $60 million, a 3% increase from the previous year, according to USA Today.

“That seems to fall into a larger pattern where, in general, more wealth leads to more emissions,” said Seth Wynes, a professor at the University of Waterloo who has published research on the relationship between sports and climate change. “Richer individuals produce more emissions than poorer individuals. The same is true generally for nations. So as leagues or teams become more affluent, it’s not a surprising result.”

The immediate future of Big Ten football is set. Major media contracts have been signed, and games are scheduled through 2028.

Multiple experts mentioned making college sports regionally organized again would alleviate some of the problem. In the Big Ten, doing so would place the four former Pac-12 schools in a West division. That would lean into the decades-long rivalries of these programs and lessen the environmental strain of travel.

But re-implementing the East and West divisional format likely can’t be done until 2029 at the earliest, meaning the 2024 bump in emissions is likely to remain steady for the next four years.

“We should be going in the direction of more regional, not less,” Orr said. “Let’s crunch this smaller, not let’s blow it up bigger.”

– Mekhi Abbott, Henry Brown, Keelin Brown, Shaela Foster, Alexa Henry, Steven Jacobs, Caroline Koutsos, Matthew Neus, Joshua Panepento, Brandon Schwartzberg, Laura Van Pate, and Matthew Weinsheimer contributed to the report.


– Capital News Service is a student-staffed reporting service operated by the University of Maryland’s Phillip Merrill College of Journalism. Stories are available at the CNS site and may be reprinted as long as credit is given to Capital News Service and, most importantly, to the students who produced the work.

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