The Spin | Pat Cummins takes lead on climate crisis as cricketers pitch green plan

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It was four years ago during the Covid lockdown that Pat Cummins found himself with some time on his hands and started to join the dots between some of what he had experienced on the cricket field and the climate crisis. The time he lost six kilos in a day, the days he found it hard to breathe.

He thought about it more when he became captain and started to make decisions based on whether he wanted his team to be starting or finishing in the shade. And more when his first son, Albie, was born. He came up with a practical plan: that he would help put solar panels on his local cricket club Penrith, a blue-collar area in the western suburbs of Sydney that becomes very hot in the heart of the summer. He found some companies that would provide solar and paid for the installation himself. And so, alongside some other Australian cricketers, the idea for Cricket for Climate was born.

It has been, from the start, a player-led movement, with cricketers contributing financially to the installation of solar panels at their junior and grade clubs – Josh Hazlewood at Tamworth CC, Moises Henriques at St George DCC, Rachael Haynes and Alyssa Healy at Sydney CC, and Nathan Lyon at Northern District CC. And then, in a major partnership with Cricket Australia, 285kW of solar panels were installed at the National Cricket Centre in Brisbane.

The idea was simple: solar would reduce carbon emissions, enable clubs to use the money saved in energy bills to further the future of the game – to invest in nets or buy new equipment and, lastly, help cricket lovers to start a conversation about climate and energy transition.

They held a summit, inviting the federal minister for climate change and energy, Cricket Australia, movers and shakers. And because it was Cummins and because it was cricket, people came.

Joanne Bowen is the company’s chief executive and originally from the UK. “It’s quite phenomenal how embedded cricket is within the community [in Australia],” she says. “It’s exciting, we’ve got eight million cricket fans, the prime minister, a bunch of politicians, CEOs, other sports we can influence because our venues are also football clubs, councils, plus all the general public. The power of that is phenomenal.”

The Australia captain, Alyssa Healy, helped to pay for the installation of solar panels at her cricket club in Sydney. Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP

Cricket for Climate has run academy sessions, talking about the links between extreme weather and cricket, how individuals can take action for themselves and how to build resilience for the community game. Attendees have included Alex Carey, Ashton Agar, David Moody and the under-19s Kane Halfpenny, Louis Smith, Olivia Maxwell, Eva Ragg and Beth Worthley. The very young and also those looking towards the end of their careers, thinking about their children’s futures. The idea is that they, too, will feel able to speak out as Cummins has done – not without risk to his own personal standing.

Now the scope of Cricket for Climate’s plans have changed, success has brought impatience to do more. Bowen, one woman rotating an increasing number of hats, explains: “Rather than one club at a time, we want to do things at scale.

“We have the big four banks wanting to partner with us to do multiple clubs, to push further than solar, to make mini green power stations that generate so much power that it goes back into the grid to help stabilise it as the country transitions away from coal. We’ve got bigger announcements in the next few months too, really ambitious projects.”

The number of people prepared to listen is increasing as players and parents start voting with their feet. “We’re starting to see clubs in far northern Queensland say: ‘Our participation rate is dropping off, kids aren’t training, they are starting to choose less risky sports like basketball, which you can play inside.’ Who wants to pay 500 bucks for a season if it constantly gets interrupted?”

Outside Australia, things have been moving as well. There was a good showing at Gloucestershire’s Nevil Road ground last Thursday night for the Greener Games Sustainability Conference, organised by a coalition of the club, the Bristol Climate & Nature Partnership, and the Next Test climate and cricket group (of which – full disclosure – I am a member).

Prof Steve Simpson from the University of Bristol, a marine biologist, who has also worked on the Blue Planet series, spoke about the power of “active hope”. Asif Rehmanwala – the chief executive of Ecotricity, a board member at GCCC and the vice-chair of Forest Green Rovers – explained how “the world’s greenest football club” has grown and stretched, and how cricket could do more.

A group of more than a hundred professional women’s footballers this week published an open letter to Fifa calling for the sport’s global governing body to drop the Saudi oil company Aramco – the world’s largest corporate greenhouse gas emitter – as a sponsor on both environmental and humanitarian grounds. The International Cricket Council, which last year signed a renewal of its own agreement with Aramco, has not yet experienced such a public pushback from players, though many were known to be unhappy about having to be interviewed in front of Aramco billboards and be presented with the Aramco player of the match award.

The ICC did, however, ask Cricket for Climate to present at its conference in autumn. Bowen worried that she would be heckled off stage – but she was welcomed. The mood, slowly, thankfully, is changing; the problem is cricket doesn’t have time for creeping evolution any more.

Quote of the week

We believe the position reached strikes an appropriate balance by ensuring fairness in the elite game while ensuring inclusivity at a recreational level” – the England and Wales Cricket Board’s announcement of its new transgender policy, which will ban transgender women from tier one and tier two of the women’s domestic competition, but permit inclusion in recreational cricket and tier three, with clubs to police the policy.

Bates breaks match record

During New Zealand’s T20 World Cup final triumph on Sunday, Suzie Bates overtook Mithali Raj to become the most capped woman in international cricket – 334 matches, which comprised 163 one-day internationals, 171 Twenty20 internationals (and not a single Test).

It was yet another milestone for Bates, who has been playing international cricket for 18 years – though she did not commit fully to cricket until 2011 when she had to decide whether to accept the captaincy of the White Ferns. She also played basketball for New Zealand, including at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Basketball’s loss was cricket’s gain, and Bates developed alongside the New Zealand side, being the first player to get a pro contract in 2013.

She was part of the team that lost the 2010 T20 World Cup final against Australia, so she wasn’t going to let last weekend’s chance of glory slip through her fingers easily – especially with the Aussies out of the picture. In the final she made a gumption-filled 32 at the top of the order and snaffled three catches – not to mention that crucial wicket in the final over of the semi-final, asking for the ball after not bowling in 14 internationals, to ensure West Indies went home.

Her captain, Sophie Devine, christened the 37-year-old Bates, Lea Tahuhu and herself as “the grandmas” of the team. She said afterwards: “To have her in the side, it is just special,” while Bates’s young opening partner Georgia Plimmer called her “an exceptional human being”.

Suzie Bates (right) celebrates New Zealand’s T20 World Cup win alongside the side’s fellow ‘grandmas’ Sophie Devine (centre) and Lea Tahuhu (left). Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP

But the last word should go to Bates herself, interviewed just after the winning moment, about her old mucker Devine. “This means everything for us,” she said.

“We’ve played team sport for so long. We pulled our way back to the top. I think we’ll probably have a cuddle for even longer later. There have been some dark times … when we couldn’t get a win leading into this World Cup. We questioned ourselves as leaders, but we just kept backing up, so it’s really special.” An all-time great is a world champion at last.

Memory lane

Happy 46th birthday to Steve Harmison! Twenty years ago he ran through West Indies’ second innings at Sabina Park, with his Test-best figures of seven for 12 helping to skittle the hosts for 47 – still their lowest ever – as the tourists opened their 2004 tour with a 10-wicket victory. As Lawrence Booth observed for this newsletter back then: “It was bye bye Wor Steve, the homesick local lad who lost his run-up a year ago in Australia. And hello some character nicknamed Grievous Bodily Harmison by the tabloids, a white Curtly Ambrose who is humble enough to learn from his mistakes.”

Steve Harmison celebrates his fifth wicket of seven – the dismissal of Tino Best – on a mesmeric fourth day of the first Test in March 2004. Photograph: Rebecca Naden/PA

Harmison then helped himself to six for 61 at the next Test in Port of Spain, and despite Brian Lara top-scoring across the four-match series with precisely 500 runs, England were comfortable 3-0 winners. Thanks to his devastating contributions with the ball, Harmison was an extremely uncontroversial pick for player of the series.

Still want more?

No Plan B: Raf Nicholson analyses England’s Women’s T20 World Cup exit and calls for change.

England’s return to Rawalpindi evokes memories of a “mega win” for the men’s Test team, writes Simon Burnton.

And Jack Leach felt like a Bazball “fraud” but, as Simon reports, the spinner has found his mojo after a phone call from Ben Stokes.

… by writing to tanya.aldred.freelance@theguardian.com.

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