# Sustainable energy transitions in sports tourism: bridging infrastructure investment and event legacy planning

**Authors:** Hamida Toyirova, Parviz Toyirov

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fspor.2026.1794795 · 2026-03-12

## TL;DR

This paper explores how sustainable energy in sports venues can shape people's emotional and physical experiences, encouraging environmental awareness and action.

## Contribution

It introduces the Embodied Sustainable Sports Experience (ESSE) Framework, linking bodily experiences of green infrastructure to climate engagement.

## Key findings

- Green infrastructure in sports tourism alters sensory experiences, evoking emotions like comfort and pride.
- The ESSE Framework connects somatic encounters with sustainability to identity and behavior changes.
- Sports tourism in emerging destinations offers unique opportunities to embed sustainability into everyday experiences.

## Abstract

How do people come to care about the environmental footprint of the places where they cheer, compete, and celebrate? This conceptual analysis argues that the answer lies not in information alone but in what bodies feel. Sustainable energy transitions in sports tourism venues—geothermal heating that steadies the air, solar arrays that reshape rooflines, natural ventilation that reconnects indoor arenas with the outdoors—alter the sensory fabric of sporting spaces in ways that generate distinctive emotional responses: comfort, pride, hope, and sometimes moral dissonance. Drawing on phenomenological theories of embodiment, the sociology of emotion in sport, and the concept of affective atmospheres, we develop the Embodied Sustainable Sports Experience (ESSE) Framework. The ESSE Framework maps three interconnected layers—somatic encounter, affective response, and identity-behavior translation—through which bodily experiences of green infrastructure may catalyze engagement with climate action. We illustrate the framework through conceptual application to mega-event legacies and national energy transitions in Central Asia, arguing that emerging sports tourism destinations hold particular promise for embedding sustainability into the lived, felt texture of sporting life. This analysis contributes to the interdisciplinary dialogue on how sport—as a uniquely embodied and emotionally charged domain of human experience—can move people toward environmental consciousness and action.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13018135/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13018135