Tuesday June 2, 2026 at 4:41pm
FIM EnduroGP World Championship builds on its recognised sustainability leadership with a strengthened Sustainability Week campaign, while FIM Hard Enduro World Championship reinforces its commitment through a clear and structured manifesto.
Maurizio Micheluz - Track Inspector, FIM EnduroGP © Pole Position Communication
Enduro, a discipline deeply rooted in nature, is stepping up its response to the environmental challenges it directly faces.
From forests and mountains to remote terrains, the future of the sport is inseparable from the protection of the environments where it is practiced. Across the discipline, sustainability is no longer an ambition — it is becoming a defining principle.
FIM EnduroGP sets the benchmark
FIM EnduroGP has established itself as one of the leading sustainability platforms in international motorsport, backed by a consistent and long-term strategy developed jointly by the Promoter and the FIM.
That commitment was formally recognised in 2024 with the FIM Environmental Trophy, confirming its position at the forefront of responsible event management.
Its sustainability model is built on concrete action:
The EnduroGP Forest initiative driving reforestation efforts
Carbon footprint measurement and compensation programmes
Active involvement in the FIM Ride Green programme
Championship-wide recycling and waste management systems
Effective event dismantling and site restoration processes
Behind the scenes, the Promoter continues to raise the bar — actively implementing the FIM Environmental Code while introducing stricter requirements to ensure sustainable paddock operations across all events.
Marc Sans Soria (ESP) - Stark Varg, Electric Motorcycle, FIM EnduroGP, © Pole Position Communication
Beyond environment: people and communities at the core
Sustainability in FIM EnduroGP goes further than environmental impact.The championship is actively working to:
Improve gender balance across sport and leadership
Strengthen connections with local communities
Deliver positive and lasting local impact
Engage riders as visible ambassadors for responsible behaviour
In 2025, this approach took a further step with the full implementation of the KiSS (Keep it Shiny and Sustainable) format, embedding sustainability into every event.
Josep García (ESP) - KTM, FIM EnduroGP © Pole Position Communication
FIM Sustainability Week: from action to amplification
Now, FIM EnduroGP is turning up the volume.
The newly reinforced FIM Sustainability Week campaign is designed to showcase, connect and amplify the work already happening across the championship — bringing sustainability to the forefront of every race weekend.
Delivered as a joint effort between the Promoter, the FIM and the CEN, the campaign introduces a strong communication presence at every competition, ensuring sustainability is not only implemented, but seen, understood and shared.
The focus is clear:
Making existing actions more visible
Sharing best practices across events
Mobilising riders as key voices
Encouraging responsible behaviour across the entire ecosystem
The message: sustainability is not just managed — it is communicated, experienced and lived.
Carla Alvarenga, CEO of Prime Stadium, Promoter of FIM EnduroGP, said: “Sustainability is not a new direction for FIM EnduroGP World Championship — it is something we have been building over time through real actions and strong collaboration with the FIM. Sustainability Week allows us to take this work further, to give it visibility, and to engage our entire community around a shared responsibility: protecting the environments that define our sport.”
Hard Enduro: driving progress through responsibility
Hard Enduro is stepping forward with a clear and structured sustainability vision, formalised through its manifesto, “Progress Through Responsibility.”
Far from a symbolic statement, the manifesto sets out a practical and evolving framework designed to address the specific challenges of a discipline that operates in some of the most demanding and environmentally sensitive terrains — including mountains, forests and remote landscapes.
In this context, sustainability is fully integrated into event planning and delivery. Key measures include:
Detailed environmental and terrain impact assessments adapted to each location
Implementation of controlled washing zones and responsible water management systems
Waste collection, recycling processes and the use of environmental protection measures in paddock and service areas
Close collaboration with local authorities, landowners and environmental stakeholders
Structured post-event clean-up and full site restoration
Graham Jarvis (GBR) - JARV-E, Electric Motorcycle © FIM Hard Enduro World Championship
This operational approach is supported by a broader vision that goes beyond environmental management. Hard Enduro is actively contributing to the evolution of the sport by:
Promoting inclusivity, including the development of women’s participation and youth pathways
Supporting grassroots riders and strengthening access to the discipline
Encouraging innovation, including the progressive integration of new technologies
Delivering tangible economic and social value to host communities
Sandra Gómez (ESP) and Teodor Kabakchiev (BUL) © FIM Hard Enduro World Championship
At its core, the Hard Enduro manifesto acknowledges a key reality: the discipline has an impact — and managing that impact responsibly, transparently and progressively is essential for its future.
Through this structured approach, Hard Enduro positions itself as an active contributor to the broader sustainability transformation of Enduro.
A discipline moving forward together
Across both championships, one direction is clear.
Enduro is combining experience, concrete action and stronger communication to drive sustainability forward — not as an obligation, but as a necessity for its future.
Leticia Castaño De Elizalde, Operations Manager - FIM Hard Enduro World Championship stated:
“Back in the day, many organiser discussions focused on logistics: where teams would park, paddock layouts, permits, schedules and sporting regulations. Those topics remain important, but sustainability has now become part of the discussion from the start. Today, we are always asking organisers what systems they have in place to manage waste, protect terrain, control refuelling activities, and minimise the impact of the event on the environment. These considerations were rarely part of the planning process in the past, but they are becoming routine now. The next step is to continue to develop standards, monitoring them, and ensuring sustainability becomes part of how events are set up across the championship.”
Eddie Karlsson (SWE) - Stark Varg, Electric Motorcycle © FIM Hard Enduro World Championship
HARD ENDURO MANIFESTO
John Collins, FIM Enduro Commission Director, said: “Enduro is uniquely exposed to environmental challenges, and that comes with responsibility. The work developed within FIM EnduroGP shows how structure, commitment and collaboration can deliver real progress. At the same time, the Hard Enduro sustainability manifesto is an important step forward, reinforcing this direction across the discipline with a clear framework based on responsibility and continuous improvement. Together, these initiatives show how the sport is evolving with purpose.”
Protecting the terrain today is the only way to race tomorrow.