FIVB reaffirms commitment to building a better
world through volleyball during Olympism365 Summit
LAUSSANNE, Switzerland, June 6, 2025.- At the inaugural Olympism365
Summit in Lausanne from 4 to 5 June, the FIVB stood at the heart of
a transformative conversation on sport’s potential to drive
sustainable development.
Featured in the final plenary session, FIVB President Fabio Azevedo
joined Olympic legend and changemaker Abhinav Bindra OLY on stage to
speak candidly about how volleyball, and sport at large, can make a
real difference through collective action. It was here that the FIVB
President also pledged coordinated action with the FIVB and
Volleyball Foundation to further scale and sustain Volley4Change in
Vanuatu and extend the initiative into the wider Pacific region.
The session, “Strengthening the Role of Sport as an Enabler of
Sustainable Development: Summit Outcomes and Concrete Actions”,
explored how sport can serve as a practical tool to help realise the
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
President Fabio Azevedo opened by aligning the volleyball vision
with that of the IOC – building a better world through sport. He
then noted how the FIVB Strategic Vision 2032 is focused on making
volleyball more affordable, accessible and understandable to people
around the world. From elite arenas to grassroots courts in remote
villages, the vision is about transforming volleyball into a truly
global movement.
At the centre of that transformation is the Volleyball Empowerment
programme, a landmark initiative launched in 2021. With over USD 50
million invested in more than 1,489 projects across 205 countries,
the programme supports coaching, equipment, and capacity-building to
enable national teams to reach their full potential.
However, realising these efforts needed to be expanded to projects
not necessarily within the FIVB ecosystem, but still promoting the
values of volleyball, the FIVB launched the Volleyball Foundation in
2024.
The FIVB President spoke with passion about the Volleyball
Foundation-supported Brahmaputra Volleyball League (BVL) in India, a
grassroots league founded by former national captain Abhijit
Bhattacharya, and emphasised how it reshaped his own sense of
purpose.
“I’ve been working for volleyball for 35 years now, but this was a
lifetime experience for me,” said FIVB President Fabio Azevedo. “I
saw kids playing barefoot, playing on dirt. I saw kids and a
community, far from being privileged, donating everything. I met a
lady, 93-years old, who donates 20% of her 150-dollar monthly
pension to an under-12 volleyball team. And she’s following every
single match. I saw kids playing barefoot like lions. That gave me,
humbly, a greater responsibility to lead our sport towards society
and to allow more people to have access to our sport.”
IOC President-elect Kirsty Coventry also addressed the Summit to
conclude the final session. During her speech, she reflected on the
stories from the BVL, commenting:
“Fabio, you felt the Ubuntu spirit. That fight of the lion of those
kids, the 93-year-old lady sharing the little that she has, that’s
exactly what it is. Ubuntu is a huge foundation for me; it’s a part
of my legacy. It’s a part of my everyday life. And it is: I am
because we are. And it means that any little thing I do has a ripple
effect onto you and everyone around us.”
Indian Olympic gold medallist and Founder of the Abhinav Bindra
Foundation, Abhinav Bindra, stressed the importance of collective
action when discussing the impact of the Olympic Values Education
Programme (OVEP) in India.
“Meaningful progress only happens when it is co-owned. When public
systems, civil society and the sports movement not only align in
purpose but design and sustain sports programmes together.
Transformation only becomes real when ownership is shared, when
these sectors come together, not just to align, but to co-create.
“Sport must meet people where they are. Whether the priority is
gender equality, mental health or climate action, sport must connect
to what matters. People invest in what they can see, feel and
benefit from.”
In addition, Her Excellency Sheikha Hind bint Hamad Al Thani, Vice
President of the Qatar Foundation, who is also a member of the
Volleyball Foundation Board, joined a panel alongside UN Special
Representative of the Secretary-General on Ending Violence Against
Children, Najat Maalla M’jidm.
Addressing the Summit, Her Excellency stated: “One of the
partnerships we worked on just yesterday was with the FIVB. We have
committed to developing female coaches in volleyball and, once we
pilot the real framework of developing female coaches, we would like
to see that across all the different sports.”
Other speakers during the final plenary session included Zeph
Nhleko, Chief Economist at the Development Bank of Southern Africa;
Nate Hurst, Chief Sustainability Officer at Visa; Auvita Rapilla,
IOC Member and Chair of the IOC Olympism365 Commission; and Emma
Terho OLY, Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission. |