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‘It’s embarrassing’: riders say time is up for fossil fuel sponsorship of heat-affected Tour Down Under

about 20 hours ago
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The first time Maeve Plouffe trained in the heat, she was in Paris in the lead-up to the Olympics.It was supposed to be an easy ride to help get used to the conditions.When she returned, she fainted from heat sickness.“That’s how badly I was affected,” she says.“Racing in extreme heat is like playing chicken with your environment.

”What was once a speciality has now become standard, the Australian Olympic cyclist says, especially ahead of big races such as the Tour Down Under that are known for intense conditions.Training starts a month in advance, up to three times a week, and takes place in a glass box roughly the size of a small conference room within the South Australian Sports Institute.Sessions run for an hour, during which the chamber is heated to between 36C and 40C to simulate riding for extended periods in extreme heat, in service of mentally and physically preparing competitors for extreme conditions.“Racing in it feels like your whole body is encapsulated in heat,” Plouffe says.“Everything just deteriorates so fast and there’s no relief from it.

”Sign up: AU Breaking News emailCycling as a sport is particularly vulnerable to its environment, especially as climate change pushes extremes to grow more intense,That reality is beginning to force an uneasy conversation within the sport about its relationship with fossil fuel producers such as the Australian oil and gas company Santos, sponsor of the Tour Down Under, which begins on 16 January,Santos has held naming rights to the race since 2010 and renewed its relationship in January last year, giving it the rights until 2028,It has faced protests and calls for divestment and dissociation, particularly after the 2019-20 bushfires,Riders themselves are increasingly uneasy about the relationship.

Plouffe, who holds degrees in law and marine biology, does not criticise Santos or the race organisers directly but says the next three years give organisers time to plan the race’s future.“I think it will just resonate better for a lot of people involved if there was an option to have a different sponsor of the event,” she says.The former national road champion Brodie Chapman agreed, saying the Tour Down Under sponsorships needed to reflect “the values of the modern world, the Australian people, the natural world and athletes”.The former national champion Cyrus Monk says it is “embarrassing” that Santos sponsors the biggest race in Australia.“I’d love to see another sponsor to be able to step in,” he says.

Monk says it is often assumed another sponsor would be difficult to find, but it is not clear this is true.Race organisers and Santos have not been transparent about how much the company pays for naming rights, nor how much the South Australian government kicks in.“Obviously the dream would be similar to the [Belgian] Renewi Tour, where the sponsor is a renewable energy company that is doing something better for the environment,” Monk says.Santos has not responded to questions but a spokesperson for the Tour Down Under praises the company as a “valued naming rights partner”, saying “without their support we would not be able to deliver a world class international bike race”.“Their support has enabled our event to grow which has seen the introduction of a women’s WorldTour race with equal prize money to the men, and the TDU being recognised as Australia’s best sporting event in 2024,” the spokesperson says.

The spokesperson says “natural gas produced by Santos plays an important part in South Australia’s world-leading investment in renewable energy, and its carbon capture and storage project at Moomba decarbonising the equivalent of 700,000 cars off our roads each year” – an argument that has also been echoed by the South Australian premier, Peter Malinauskas, and the company.Neither Santos nor race organisers have responded to questions about whether the company helped draft the Tour’s response.Earlier this year, Santos received approval for its Barossa gas development, considered one of the dirtiest gas projects in the country.The Moomba CCS project has so far been able to capture just 4.6% of Santos’s total corporate emissions, according to one analysis.

Matt Rendell, a former Tour De France commentator who has been working with the Badvertising campaign, says the economics of cycling have made the sport “an unexpected locus of this rearguard propaganda activity by the fossil fuel industry”, and the way contracts work means athletes often are not free to raise concerns.“Cycling is cheap and the bicycle has impeccable environmental credentials,” Rendell says.“These companies want to associate themselves with cycling because it allows them to associate themselves with the environment, the photography, the imagery, the dream of the wilderness and peak physical human performance.”There is also a complex relationship between races and the cities that host them, he says, with race organisers reliant on the goodwill of local authorities for access to roads and public infrastructure.Santos is the biggest company with headquarters in Adelaide, underlining the race’s South Australian identity.

Similar battles over fossil fuel advertising are playing out in Europe over the Tour De France’s relationship to Total and Ineos.Rendell says the Tour Down Under represents an obvious flashpoint, given it is held in a place “where cycling comes into contact with extreme weather”.“Cycling works on the imagery of the man against mountain.It’s a David and Goliath scenario, but that’s also the struggle against the continued poisoning of the atmosphere,” he says.The assumption that no other sponsor could be found is “a failure to imagine things otherwise”, he says.

“In the simplest terms possible: whether it’s Santos or someone else, as long as you are locked into a sponsor, you’re not out looking for other sponsors.As soon as there’s doubt, that changes.”
societySee all
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Man who infected woman with HIV after stopping treatment is jailed

A man who infected a woman with HIV after he stopped his treatment and did not tell her about his diagnosis has been jailed for four-and-a-half years.Luke Davis, 31, was found guilty of inflicting grievous bodily harm on the woman, who described being diagnosed with HIV as a “life sentence”.Davis, of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, had initially taken his medication after being diagnosed with HIV in 2017, but disengaged completely from his care in 2019, Hereford crown court heard.His victim discovered she was HIV positive in 2021 after a routine screening.Judge Martin Jackson said Davis chose not to tell the woman about his diagnosis for “entirely selfish reasons”

about 19 hours ago
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I loved my teaching job. But as a trans man in Texas, quitting was the only way to get my dignity back

After the state’s bathroom ban went into effect in December amid a slew of new anti-trans policies, I couldn’t keep trying to hide my identity at workUntil recently, I was a music teacher in north Texas. I also happen to be trans. I have never, ever told a student about my identity. At work, I was “stealth” – a term that means that I passed as a cisgender man. Only my administrators knew I was trans, because I was not yet taking gender-affirming hormones when I started this job in my early 20s

about 20 hours ago
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HMRC accepted ‘tolerable’ risk of harm in child benefit fraud crackdown

UK tax authorities believed that withdrawing child benefit payments from parentswithout prior consultation as part of an anti-fraud drive carried a “tolerable” risk, with only a “remote” chance of inflicting harm, according to internal documents.The revelations come just weeks after it emerged that at least 63% of those who had their child benefit stopped were in fact still living in the UK and had not emigrated, as inferred by incomplete Home Office data used in the crackdown.Senior HM Revenue and Customs officials are due to be questioned about the episode by the Treasury select committee on Tuesday, which last year said the department appeared to have been “cavalier with people’s finances”.The controversy began after HMRC suspended almost 24,000 child benefit accounts between July and October. Parents received letters referring to overseas holidays – sometimes dating back as far as three years – for which the Home Office had no record of a return journey

about 23 hours ago
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People put off giving CPR by unrealistic TV depictions, researchers say

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a dramatic intervention, but researchers say TV portrayals are often misleading – potentially influencing whether viewers feel able to carry it out themselves.According to the British Heart Foundation (BHF) there are more than 30,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests every year in the UK.But while CPR by bystanders can help save lives, the American Heart Association (AHA) notes the percentage of people in need who receive it is only about 35-45% globally.The AHA has since 2008 attempted to increase such rates by stressing that people who are not trained, and hence might not feel comfortable giving breaths or searching for a pulse, should only perform chest compressions on adults – a position shared by the NHS.Now researchers say TV shows often depict lay people carrying out additional steps, potentially perpetuating barriers to viewers carrying out the life-saving intervention

about 24 hours ago
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Guardian Hope appeal raises £950,000 for charities tackling racism and division

Generous Guardian readers have so far raised more than £950,000 as our Hope appeal supporting charities tackling social division, racism and hatred enters its final few days.The 2025 appeal, which closes at midnight on Wednesday evening, is aiming to raise £1m for grassroots voluntary organisations campaigning against extremism, anti-migrant rhetoric, and the re-emergence of “1970s-style racism”.Our five partner charities are: Citizens UK, the Linking Network, Locality, Hope Unlimited Charitable Trust and Who is Your Neighbour?Thousands of Guardian readers have so far given to the appeal, with many telling us via the email button on the donations page why they were delighted to donate.One said: “I’m pretty broke, and my charitable giving is mostly reserved for those suffering in war zones. But brokeness is relative, and I was inspired to make a small donation by the Saturday article by Zoe Williams

1 day ago
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Mattel launches its first autistic Barbie

With an animated Barbie film in development, following the success of Greta Gerwig’s 2023 blockbuster movie, Mattel Studios will certainly have a diverse range of characters to bring to life.On Monday, Mattel launches its first autistic Barbie. Coming barely six months after its first doll with type 1 diabetes, this newest addition to Barbie’s Fashionistas range is designed so that more children “see themselves in Barbie” and to encourage all children to play with dolls that reflect the world around them.Autism is a form of neurodivergence that influences how people experience and interact with society. While characteristics of autism vary according to the individual, more than one child in a hundred is believed to be autistic, according to the World Health Organization

1 day ago
politicsSee all
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Energy and health optimism help lift civil service morale under Labour

1 day ago
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Peter Mandelson declines to apologise for association with Jeffrey Epstein

1 day ago
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Slashing jury trials could clear courts backlog within a decade, says Lammy

1 day ago
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Senior Labour MPs urge government to ban cryptocurrency political donations

1 day ago
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Mandelson praises Trump’s ‘graciousness’ and declines to apologise for friendship with Jeffrey Epstein – as it happened

2 days ago
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UK wants any transition of power in Iran to be peaceful, says minister

2 days ago