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Baseball gets eco-friendly

Eve Troeh Jul 11, 2011
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Baseball gets eco-friendly

Eve Troeh Jul 11, 2011
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Kai Ryssdal: The baseball All-Star Game is tomorrow. Forty-nine thousand some odd fans will fill Chase Field in Phoenix to see baseball’s best — or at least its most popular.

That many people generate a whole lot of trash. But the park’s armed with recycling bins, and the league plans to compost most of what’s left over. All part of a plan, as Eve Troeh reports from the Sustainability Desk, to get the national pasttime — and other sports too — to go green.


Eve Troeh: A night game at Seattle’s Safeco Field sounds like any other. But at the pre-game show, the Mariners get an award from the state of Washington.

Commentator: 2011 Recycler of the Year award.

Recyclers of the year, and there to accept it?

Commentator: Captain Plastic and Kid Compost.

Captain Plastic and Kid Compost, two new Mariners mascots. They’re the face of a behind-the-scenes push to “green” the game.

Scott Jenkins: There’s a better way to play here.

Scott Jenkins is vice president of ballpark operations. He’s also a founding member of the Green Sports Alliance. It’s a group of 30 pro teams — hockey to soccer — working with the Natural Resources Defense Council to shrink the environmental footprint of sports. Jenkins says, like any major industry, it’s a big one.

Jenkins: We use a lot of water, we use a lot of energy, we create a lot of waste, we take planes.

He’s tackling all that: from buying carbon offsets for the visiting team, to pressing vendors for greener products. Like any good baseball fan, he loves stats.

Jenkins: Our electric use is down 30 percent. Our water use is down 15 percent. We’re currently at 79 percent recycling rate of our waste.

He says the team’s saved half a million dollars a year on power bills by doing simple things like swapping a scoreboard’s old light bulbs for LEDs.

Jenkins: On that board alone, enough to power 100 homes for an entire year.

But there are some non-negotiables.

Jenkins: We have to water the grass, we have to cut it, we have to fertilize it.

Astroturf’s not likely to fly — it’s thought to cause more player injuries. Jenkins likes to turn off the powerful park lights during day games — that can save more than $1,000 — but:

Jenkins: The quality of the game is first and foremost, and if the umpire says I want the lights, or the manager wants the lights, we’ll turn ’em on.

How do the fans feel? Some get confused. What were trash cans now only say “composting” or “recycling.” So, what do you do with that empty beer cup?

Fans: I will be placing it in the recycling container. But it doesn’t go in this one, it goes in that one. This one says for bottles and cans, that’s not a bottle or a can.

Jenkins says it’s a learning process. The fans are a captive audience for green products and practices.

Legendary sports agent Leigh Steinberg agrees. He’s started his own Sporting Green Alliance.

Leigh Steinberg: You’ve got millions and millions of people that might otherwise never think about the environment, and all of a sudden it’s a little big glamorous, a little bit sexy, it’s a little bit interesting. Sports can lead the way.

Especially if you get big names on board. Steinberg’s seen athletes sway lots of social issues. So far, few players have voiced support — or any opinion — of environmental efforts. Steinberg’s pushing his stars to take on the issue. He says it could also land them endorsement deals for green products.

At Safeco Field, the Mariners push their own green product. No bobblehead doll this time.

Captain Plastic: I’ve got a dirtbag — would you like one?

Captain Plastic tosses five-pound bags of Safeco Soil into the arms of departing fans. It’s made partly of trash composted after Mariners games. It stinks, like manure.

Fan: It smells like awesome compost. I can’t wait to put this in my pots.

Some people ask for two bags.

I’m Eve Troeh for Marketplace.

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