Green clay tennis courts become carbon negative after 10 years
University of Washington
The United States has around a quarter of a million tennis courts, 40,000 of which are helping mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Green clay tennis courts, an alternative to traditional hard courts and the red clay courts popular in Europe, are constructed with a type of rock that reacts with carbon dioxide and water to sequester carbon as a stable dissolved salt. In a recent study published in Applied Geochemistry, UW researchers show that in the U.S., green clay courts remove 25,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere each year and 80% of green clay courts make up for construction emissions within 10 years. Moving forward, the researchers hope to experiment with other materials that also remove carbon dioxide without compromising performance for players.
For more information contact lead author Frankie Pavia, UW assistant professor of oceanography, at fjpavia@uw.edu.
A full list of co-authors and funding is available in the paper.
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