Language

Receive weekly heat updates during the tournament

The Climate Story for:

Mexico City Stadium

Mexico flagMexico

Located in Mexico City

5 World Cup matches

Open air

This stadium has no cooling system or significant shade structure.

Mexico City Stadium will host 5 World Cup matches. See the likelihood of those matches reaching heat levels that could impact player performance, and how climate change is raising those odds.

Mexico City Stadium

0 of 5 matches at Mexico City Stadium have a high likelihood — over 50% odds — of performance-impairing heat, or heat that could impact player performance.

Across all 5 matches played at Mexico City Stadium, climate change is increasing the odds of this heat by 5 to 8 percentage points.

Heat trends at Mexico City Stadium

Extremely hot June-July days have steadily increased since the first North American World Cup in 1970. Climate change accounts for 100% of the hot days that Mexico City Stadium experiences today.

Extremely hot daysDays added by climate change

Extremely hot June-July days are at least as hot as the hottest 10% of days at each stadium location during the 1991-2020 period. These are locally defined extreme heat thresholds.

Pink shows the modeled number of hot days that would have occurred without climate change. Red shows the days added by climate change.

Source: Climate Shift Index and ERA5 reanalysis.

Share

World Cup 2026 & Climate Change

Mexico flag

Mexico City Stadium

Located in Mexico City

Open air
0 of 5 matches have above 50% odds of performance-impairing heat
  • “Performance-impairing heat” is heat above 28°C (82.4°F) — a threshold associated with elite players running slower, less far, and less often. Source: Climate Shift Index and ERA5 reanalysis.