Kylian Mbappe and his team setting new goals for the environment traveling by train, leading the way in climateconscious football!

France’s football teams will travel to all matches under three hours away by train instead of plane in a bid to cut carbon emissions.

The country’s football federation announced the new policy, which applies to all national sides, last week.

But it will take a bit longer to implement for the men’s senior team, as the Fédération Française de Football (FFF) ponders the logistics of public transport for global stars like Kylian Mbappé.

“With [manager] Didier Deschamps, we’re looking into the possibility of our France senior team traveling by train for the matches in Lyon in March, to ensure that our France team sets a good example and highlights a policy of ecological transition that we support,” FFF president Philippe Diallo said on Thursday.

The policy is already in place for the women’s team and the under-21s, coached by Thierry Henry.

It’s a welcome example in a world where sporting fixtures can generate a hefty amount of carbon emissions. The ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup currently taking place in India, for example, involves around eight flights for the teams to different city venues.

So many, in fact, that it poses a problem for some tall fast bowlers, who get cramped in regular plane cabins.

France has already set the example on a national level, however, by banning short-haul domestic flights earlier this year.

Under the country’s new environmental laws, domestic flights are banned if the journey can be made in under two-and-a-half hours by rail.

But that rule doesn’t apply to private planes, leading to some notoriously speedy flights. Last year France’s Paris-Saint-Germain found themselves in hot water after taking a plane from Paris to Nantes – a measly 380km.

The FFF is aware that transporting the French A men’s team by rail poses some challenges.

“There are questions of security and questions relating to the comfort of other passengers. If we put the French team tomorrow at Lyon station, it is possible that there will be crowds and that the trains don’t leave on time,” said Diallo.

“That’s why I mentioned March, we gave ourselves time, with the managers of SNCF, the French team, the FFF and the public authorities to study all aspects.”