Sunderland announce exciting new Stadium and Academy of Light plans as part of energy efficiency drive

Sunderland have unveiled new plans for the Academy of Light and Stadium of Light as part of a new sustainability strategy.
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Club chiefs say the plan is in line with the ‘United Nations Sustainability Development Goals, focusing on SAFC’s role as a football club in the local and regional communities and the impact it can have to support environmental change and energy usage.’

Sunderland’s ambition is to be energy-self sufficient from renewable sources by 2028, while also providing energy to the National Grid network for the benefit of the wider community.

The plans include:

Sunderland's Academy of Light training base.Sunderland's Academy of Light training base.
Sunderland's Academy of Light training base.
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- A 40mW solar farm at the Academy of Light for which the club are “preparing a planning application and applying for a grid connection in the near future. If successful, this will feed clean renewable electricity into the UK network.”

- Sunderland are ‘actively exploring’ the potential to develop a ‘canopy solar farm’ above the car park surrounding the Stadium of Light, which will create a private electricity network for the benefit of the club and other businesses located on the stadium site.

- Club officials say they are also addressing waste and water use by embarking on and progressing a number of initiatives. ‘In the coming years it aims to harvest rainwater and eliminate, as far as possible, single use plastics,’ they add.

- Sunderland will also implement a club-wide transport policy, including team match day travel, which will reduce emissions.

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- There is also a wider push to find ‘creative and innovative ways’ of using public transport to enable supporters to attend matches with the “minimum environmental impact.”

A club statement added: “Further energy could also be produced from below the Stadium of Light, with the club working in collaboration with Sunderland City Council to investigate the opportunity to create a district heating system using the mine water from the disused mine on which the stadium is built.”

Steve Davison, chief operating officer at Sunderland AFC, said: “We want to set long-term and bold objectives that enable our club to have a positive impact on our collective ambitions to cut carbon emissions and reduce climate change. We have set out a series of measures, initiatives and programmes that will contribute to a more sustainable future for the Club and the environment.

"We are looking forward to actioning our sustainability plans, working with our partners, supporters, neighbours, local councils and other stakeholders. Football Clubs have an important role to play in their communities, which reaches beyond sport, and we hope to take them all with us on this journey with us as we help to tackle climate change.”

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A club statement added: “The sustainability plan will also support the club’s backing of the UN’s Sport for Climate Change. The initiative sets out specific goals to halve emissions by 2030 and aim to achieve net-zero by 2040. It is the ambition of SAFC to become the first football club in the UK to achieve these targets.

“The first stages of this commitment are underway with a programme of replacing all non-LED lights in all buildings, replacing the car park lighting and replacing the floodlights at the Eppleton Colliery Welfare ground, which is used by SAFC Women and the club’s Under-21s.”