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WORLD CLIMBING MAINTAINS A2 ASOIF GOVERNANCE CLASSIFICATION 

World Climbing has maintained its A2 classification in the Sixth Review of International Federation Governance, published today by the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF).

The result confirms the organisation's continued standing among the best-governed international sports federations within the Olympic Movement.

The ASOIF Governance Review is the benchmark assessment of governance standards across all Summer Olympic International Federations. Conducted every two years under the oversight of ASOIF's Governance Task Force and independently moderated by sports governance consultancy I Trust Sport, the review evaluates federations against a comprehensive framework of governance principles and indicators specifically designed for international sport organisations. The Sixth Review, which launched in October 2025, saw all 36 ASOIF Full and Associate Members submit completed self-assessment questionnaires.

An A2 classification places World Climbing among the highest-ranked federations in the review – a distinction that reflects the organisation's sustained commitment to transparency, institutional integrity, and responsible management of the sport at every level.

World Climbing Vice President Naomi Cleary said: "Maintaining our A2 classification in this sixth edition is not only a confirmation of the work done – it is a challenge to do more. Governance is not a destination; it is a continuous process. We are proud of where we stand, and we remain committed to applying the same rigour to our National Federations as ASOIF applies to us."

Secretary General Piero Rebaudengo added: "This result reflects the collective effort of our staff, our Executive Board, and our National Federations. As World Climbing continues to grow – on and off the competition wall – a strong governance foundation is what makes that growth sustainable."

World Climbing was among the newest members of the ASOIF family when it first achieved A2 status in the Fifth Review in 2024, making the result all the more significant as a marker of institutional maturity. Maintaining that position in the Sixth Review affirms that the progress achieved is structural, not circumstantial.

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