In addition to producing energy, the ballpark has many features designed to save energy. It uses fluorescent lighting, motion sensor lighting and energy management systems. Its new scoreboard is said to use 78 percent less energy than the old scoreboard. The ballpark also features links to several public transit lines and extensive bicycle parking.
It’s always amazed me that people who are religious recyclers at home will throw away bottles at the ballpark without a second thought. In baseball terms, Americans recycle at home but not on the road. It’s one of the reasons our national plastic bottle recycling rate has tumbled from 39% in 1996 to 23% in 2005.
So if you’re at a park that doesn’t recycle, should you spend innings four through seven harassing the park manager to recycle, missing two homers, a beanball, and a bench-clearing brawl in the process? No.
When you get home, email the team to let them know you’d root root root for the home team even more if they recycled and used disposable dishware made of compostable materials like Greenware. If your favorite team is building a new park, urge them to make it a green building as the Washington Nationals and University of Minnesota are trying to do.
And in case you missed it, read this fantastic article from Sports Illustrated on how some athletes, teams, and leagues are taking the first steps towards sustainability!