Increasing use of synthetic surfaces and synthetic turf is problematic for Several reasons.
Synthetic turf is:
Derived from fossil fuel petrochemical industry
Produces greenhouse gas emissions during manufacturing and as it degrades
Increases landfill at end of life
Produces micro-plastic pollution as synthetic turf breaks down
increases urban heat island effect on local residents.
replaces natural grass which allows soil organic carbon sequestration, provides oxygen
reduces soil biota, grass seeds and insects with a trophic impact on local biodiversity primarily birdlife.
compacts the soil increasing stormwater runoff
Toxic Chemical leachates from rubber infill pollute waterways
results in increased lower extremity injuries in elite players
long term human health impacts uncertain, but vertebrate model confirms toxicity to human health of rubber infill leachates
encourages a microbial community structure primarily defined by anthropic contamination
appears to improve water conservation, but the situation is far more complex when life-cycle assessment and irrigation to reduce heat for playability is taken into account
Other issues: increased fire risk, alternative infills, traffic, parking and cycling
This annotated bibliography was developed for the issue of conversion of an existing grass sports fields to synthetic turf in Moreland Municipality, and includes specific policy documents relating to the issue in Moreland. Most of the articles are peer reviewed science studies plus some relevant grey literature on climate. Most articles I have personally read, although for a small number I only had access to the scientific abstract to review. Google Scholar was used for researching this subject, as well as following reference trails from some science papers.
Moreland Council needs to reassess current recommended plans to rollout synthetic surfaces in the municipality with regard to Council policies developed in recent years. These policies include, but are not limited to, the Climate Emergency Framework including the Zero Carbon Moreland 2040 Framework, Waste and Litter Policy (aiming for zero waste to landfill by 2030 and a circular economy), and the Urban Heat Island Action Plan.
I have cast my scientific reading wide to encompass: total life-cycle assessment analysis related to synthetic fields and natural turf; water use and conservation; energy; soil carbon sequestration; greenhouse gas emissions; heat retention and urban heat island effect; microplastics and pollution; impact on biodiversity and plant health; health impacts and sports injuries.
This annotated bibliography was prepared for Climate Action Moreland and is current as at 15 April 2021. Climate Action Moreland has published a submission and reference list as: Synthetic Turf and the Tragedy of the Commons in Moreland. Two other related articles were also published recently on carbon footprint and greenhouse gas emissions, and synthetic turf increasing urban heat island impact:
- Natural grass or Synthetic turf? What are the total life cycle emission profiles
- How will Synthetic turf impact urban heat island and microclimate around Hosken Reserve?
Annotated Biography:
Abraham, John (April 2019) Heat risks associated with synthetic athletic fields, International Journal of Hyperthermia 36(1):1-2, DOI: 10.1080/02656736.2019.1605096 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02656736.2019.1605096
Keywords: Heat, Synthetic turf, health, Sports
A letter on the health risk from synthetic turf pitches, published in 2019 in the International Journal of Hyperthermia. “to the best knowledge of the author there have been no epidemiological studies on the prevalence of heat stress episodes associated with synthetic turf, compared with natural turf. Such a study could help answer the questions posed here, regarding dangers associated with elevated surface temperatures. These values should give pause to the use of synthetic turf in warm and sunny situations. Reliance upon regional weather reporting or the wet bulb temperature does not provide a full picture of the threat of heat on synthetic athletic fields.”
Addas, Abdullah; Goldblatt, Ran; Rubinyi, Steven. (2020). "Utilizing Remotely Sensed Observations to Estimate the Urban Heat Island Effect at a Local Scale: Case Study of a University Campus" Land 9, no. 6: 191. https://doi.org/10.3390/land9060191
Keywords: heat, UHIE, remote sensing
An Urban Heat Island Effect study of the estimated Land Surface Temperatures based on Landsat-8 observations (remote sensing) to demonstrate the relationship between LST and the characteristics of the land use and land cover on the campus of King Abdulaziz University (KAU), Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The study found a consistent variation of between 7 and 9 degrees Celsius for LST across campus, spanning all summer and winter seasons between 2014 and 2019.
They noted “changes in the stadium’s field ground from natural to artificial turf (in 2018, all sports grounds on campus were changed to artificial turf to reduce maintenance and irrigation costs), which has probably resulted in a significant increase in the LST.” “policies related to the conversion of natural green vegetation to artificial turf may—as observed, for example, in the case of the University sports stadium—have immense implications for the microclimate by increasing LST significantly.” “due to the lack of evaporation, the temperatures of AT surfaces can exceed those of natural grass by as much as 21 ◦ C and of air temperature by 17 ◦ C.”
Comment: A synthetic soccer pitch will likely raise Land Surface temperatures at Hosken Reserve. The largest impact will be felt by local residents surrounding the reserve.
Alm, Abigail., (May 2016), Is Synthetic Turf Really “Greener”? A Lifecycle Analysis of Sports Fields Across the United States, Undergraduate thesis, Carthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin https://dspace.carthage.edu/handle/123456789/5520
Keywords: LCA, Water, Synthetic turf, Natural turf, irrigation
The author attempts to provide a life cycle analysis of synthetic turf in order to determine under what circumstances the environmental benefits of a synthetic turf field outweigh the long-term environmental costs. One of the interesting facts highlighted in this study is that synthetic turf uses about 4 years worth of water in the manufacturing process as one year of natural turf irrigation. Synthetic turf will also use water for cooling and cleaning. So proffered water savings of synthetic turf may be somewhat minimal when total life-cycle assessment is taken into account.
“...producing synthetic turf, a product that raves about its ability to “save” water, requires a significant amount of water to be produced.
“A natural grass athletic field, under the assumption a standard field is 1.32 acres and must be watered once a week with a volume comparable to an acre/inch, requires 1,290 kGal to maintain the field per year (Sports Turf Managers Association and SAFE: The Foundation for Safer Athletic Fields). Whereas, synthetic fibers used to produce turf, according to Table 2, requires 6880 kGal per one million dollars spent on production.
“According to FieldTurf, one synthetic field costs 720,000 dollars to produce (Sports Turf Managers Association and SAFE: The Foundation for Safer Athletic Fields). When taken into consideration, it costs 4,985 kGal of water to produce one synthetic field. This amount is 4 times the amount required to adequately maintain a natural grass field over the course of one year (Table 4). Granted, synthetic turf will outlast a 4 year period, but may in some environments require small inputs of water to be properly maintained (cleaning and cooling) throughout the many years of use in addition to the manufacturing demands. Overall, synthetic turf may not be “saving” as much water as the companies claim when production demands are accounted for. The negative externalities featured in Table 1, 2, and 3 make artificial turf a product that should be more thoroughly evaluated before installation continues in areas across the country not featured in Figure 4.”
Adachi, Jennifer., Jansen, Chris., Lindsay, Marina., (2016), Comparison of the Lifetime Costs and Water Footprint of Sod and Artificial Turf: A Life Cycle Analysis, Austin Park, Carolina Villacis UCLA Environment 159 Professor Deepak Rajagopal June 2, 2016. https://www.ioes.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/sod-vs-artificial-turf.pdf
Keywords: LCA, Water, Synthetic turf, Natural turf, Costs
A life cycle assessment (LCA) on synthetic turf and natural grass for water footprint and lifetime costs for Southern California. From the study conclusions: “Based on our calculations, the cost of turf production is $75.29/m 2 compared to $53.41/m 2 for sod. In addition, the total water needed to maintain artificial turf is 1926 gal/ m 2 compared to 7926 gal/m 2 for sod. Clearly, from a water perspective, artificial turf will use less in the long run. However, when considering the greater cost of turf manufacturing and the impacts of its artificial materials this choice becomes less clear. Also, an individual living in an area with ample rainfall may find that turf is an inferior choice, environmentally as well as economically, based on their personal conditions. It is important to note that other factors such as chemical leaching and ecosystem disruption which are possible side-effects of artificial turf, have not been included in this analysis.”
Beard, J. B.; Green, R. L. The role of turfgrasses in environmental protection and their benefits to humans (1994). J. Environ. Qual. 1994, 23 (3), 452−460. https://acsess.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.2134/jeq1994.00472425002300030007x Keywords: Biodiversity, Natural turf
This study outlines the many benefits of natural turf grass in urban environments. From the abstract: “Turfgrass benefits may be divided into (i) functional, (ii) recreational, and (iii) aesthetic components. Specific functional benefits include: excellent soil erosion control and dust stabilization thereby protecting a vital soil resource; improved recharge and quality protection of groundwater, plus flood control; enhanced entrapment and biodegradation of synthetic organic compounds; soil improvement that includes CO 2 conversion; accelerated restoration of disturbed soils; substantial urban beat dissipation-temperature moderation; reduced noise, glare, and visual pollution problems; decreased noxious pests and allergy-related pollens; safety in vehicle operation on roadsides and engine longevity on airfields; lowered fire hazard via open, green turfed firebreaks; and improved security of sensitive installations provided by high visibility zones. The recreational benefits include a low-cost surface for outdoor sport and leisure activities enhanced physical health of participants, and a unique low-cost cushion against personal impact injuries. The aesthetic benefits include enhanced beauty and attractiveness; a complimentary relationship to the total landscape ecosystem of flowers, shrubs and trees; improved mental health with a positive therapeutic impact, social harmony and stability; improved work productivity; and an overall better quality-of-life, especially in densely populated urban areas.”
Begum, Tammana, 8 October 2020, How listening to bird song can transform our mental health, Natural History Museum, Accessed 7 March 2021 https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/how-listening-to-bird-song-can-transform-our-mental-health.html
Keywords: Health, Biodiversity. Grey Literature
Argues the importance of birdsong to our general mental health. Converting a grass oval to synthetic oval will have a trophic impact on reducing local birdlife which will be another stressor adding to human mental health.
Bernat-Ponce, E., Gil-Delgado, J.A. & López-Iborra, G.M. Replacement of semi-natural cover with artificial substrates in urban parks causes a decline of house sparrows Passer domesticus in Mediterranean towns. Urban Ecosyst 23, 471–481 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-020-00940-4
Keywords: Biodiversity, Synthetic turf
This is a rare academic study looking at the direct impact of increasing synthetic surfaces and other hard surfaces on urban biodiversity. The study focussed on decline of house sparrows, but the authors are at pains to point out other species could suffer similar decline. Urban surface changes have a trophic impact on a variety of urban birdlife. Abiotic surfaces such as synthetic grass had more impact on birdlife than conversion to hard soil. This is a cumulative impact that may not be visible with one field conversion, but biodiversity impact still needs to be included in decision making on natural grass conversion to synthetic turf.
“These park remodelling actions linked to reurbanisation processes are transforming traditional parks into domestic modified versions of them. For example, replacing natural lawn with artificial grass is seen as a way to save water (Moore 2009) and to reduce management requirements in Mediterranean climates. These changes could lead to a significant reduction of the diversity and number of available invertebrates which could have an important effect limiting the reproductive success and survival of urban bird species (Chamberlain et al. 2009; Peach et al. 2015).”
“...going back to traditional park models would probably be a better option to
preserve biodiversity. … More research is urgently needed to precisely identify the
short-, mid- and long-term effects of park remodelling and the use of artificial grass on urban biodiversity.”
Bosomworth, Karyn, Trundle, Alexei, McEvoy, Darryn (October 2013), Responding to the urban heat island: a policy and institutional analysis, VCCCAR, ISBN:
9780734048915 http://www.vcccar.org.au/publication/final-report/responding-to-urban-heat-island-policy-and-institutional-analysis
Keywords: Heat, UHIE, Synthetic turf, Australia, Melbourne.
This science based report by the Victorian Centre for Climate Change Adaptation Research (VCCCAR was funded to 2014) deals with Green Infrastructure and heat stress in the context of a warming climate and urban heat island effect. It had wide stakeholder buy in from academic researchers from various Melbourne universities and certain Victorian State Government Departments. Rather than management of heat stress as a byproduct of making a decision to put in infrastructure increasing urban heat, it focuses on addressing and mitigating urban heat through Green Infrastructure. On page 17 the report says:
“Not all Green Infrastructure is ‘Green’
A concern raised during this study was the suggestion by a number of interviewees that there is increasing use of artificial turf or grass on private and council-owned lands, because it is perceived to be ‘environmentally friendly’. One industry representative stated that they don’t call artificial turf ‘green’ infrastructure “because you can paint a wall green, but that doesn’t make it sustainable”.
Several interviewees argued that artificial turf is therefore not GI, even when coupled with underlying water retention tanks or other mechanisms. Although often portrayed as a solution to limited water availability, the literature suggests that artificial turf is not as green or eco-friendly as may have been claimed. McNitt et al (2008) state that “surface temperatures of synthetic turf are significantly higher than natural turfgrass surfaces when exposed to sunlight, with traditional synthetic turf being as much as 35-60°F higher than natural turfgrass surface temperatures”. Additionally, Claudio (2008) refers to work by Stuart Gaffin of the Center for Climate Systems Research at Columbia University, stating that “synthetic turf fields can get up to 60°F hotter than grass, with surface temperatures reaching 160°F on summer days” and concludes that the fields rival black roofs in their elevated surface temperatures.”
Boyle, Kellie., and Örmeci, Banu., (Sep 2020), Microplastics and Nanoplastics in the Freshwater and Terrestrial Environment: A Review, Water 2020, 12, 2633; doi:10.3390/w12092633 https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/9/2633
Keywords: microplastics, pollution, environmental context
Quite a good broad ranging Literature review of microplastics and their various impacts, current regulatory environment. Impacts include on freshwater, terrestrial ecosystem health and raising questions about impact on human health..
“The heat absorbency of sediments contaminated with microplastics decreases, which can have extreme effects on biota. Soil temperature determines the sex of many animals’ eggs (i.e., turtles and alligators) and many sediment-dwelling biota may dry out due to the excess permeability [59]. These types of changes can have drastic impacts to food webs and cause significant legacy affects.”
“Any biota that consumes microplastics can suffer from gastrointestinal tract issues and obstruction, potentially leading to false satiety, starvation and death [3]. However, this only considers the physical implications of the microplastic and does not take into account the chemical effects. Plasticides can easily migrate away from plastics and cause deleterious consequences to biota. Many of the additives are lipophilic and can penetrate cell membranes and interfere with biochemical reactions occurring in the cells, resulting in behavioural and reproductive issues….Once the microplastic is in the gastrointestinal tract it can leach plastic additives, as well as any toxin that it may have adsorbed when discharged to the environment (i.e., persistent organic pollutants (POPs)). Many of these additives and POPs are toxic to biota and can cause abnormalities [3], which in turn, could lead to potential death of the organism.”
“Bioaccumulation effects due to microplastics entering food networks (i.e., accumulating in bottom feeders such as sedimentary organisms), and building from one level to the next is a possibility, but has also yet to be fully explored for freshwater and terrestrial life.”
“Once there is intestinal uptake of microplastics, the reality is that the particles can then be transported throughout the body and accumulate in organs and tissues. Alarmingly, microplastics are not normally discussed as being capable of penetrating the gastro-intestinal tract; however, these studies have found that microplastics <75 μm are very capable of accumulating within the body. These early findings suggest that there is a potential threat to human health, but more research needs to be conducted to shrink the knowledge gap.”
“Nanoplastics pose a more significant threat to biota than microplastics due to their increasingly small size. It is well known that plasticides are capable of penetrating cell membranes [37] and nanoplastics are also capable of this. Both nanoplastics and plasticides have the potential to enter and accumulate in every part of any organism…..Most alarmingly, the blood-brain barrier was breached in Japanese rice fish, and such a breaching poses extreme health risks to all animals and humans.”
“The health of any environment or ecosystem is highly dependent on the biota that lives within it,
so the health impacts associated with micro- and nanoplastics will cause ecosystems to suffer along with organisms. The critical food chains and networks may suffer, and deterioration of the organisms will induce the deterioration of the ecosystem. Furthermore, although microplastics cannot penetrate plant cell walls and have minimal impacts on flora, nanoplastics have been shown to penetrate plant cell walls [4]. The difference with flora as compared to fauna is that each plant’s uptake varies depending on a multitude of factors: root volume, density and surface area, xylem volume, surface area and sap pH, transpiration, growth rate, water and lipid fractions and sorption potential, plasmalemma (bio-membrane) potential, tonoplast potential, pH of the cytoplasm and vacuoles.”
Braun, Ross C., and Bremer, Dale J., (21 March 2019), Carbon Sequestration in Zoysiagrass Turf under Different Irrigation and Fertilization Management Regimes, Agrosystems, Geosystems and Environment. https://doi.org/10.2134/age2018.12.0060
Keywords: Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Natural turf, Carbon sequestration, water, irrigation
This study was conducted on a Kansas golf course with Zoysiagrass. It highlights that Hidden Carbon costs, which are energy‐based inputs from turf maintenance, should be factored into soil C sequestration calculations. Importantly, it also took into account Nitrous Oxide (N2O), a powerful greenhouse gas in the emissions assessment.
“the net SOC sequestration rates in zoysiagrass were not statistically different at 0.412 to 0.616 Mg C ha–1 yr–1 in HMI and LMI, respectively.”
Its conclusion is that “A higher‐input management regime in turf will not increase net C sequestration compared with a low management input regime.”
“The HMI had 76% more HCC than the LMI, mainly due to N fertilization application and higher irrigation amounts. Nitrogen fertilization and higher irrigation amounts in the HMI led to not only greater N2O emissions, but also 10.4 more mowing events per year.”
Carbon Tracker. (2020). The Future’s Not in Plastics: Why Plastics Sector Demand Won’t Rescue the Oil Sector. London, UK: Carbon Tracker. Available at: https://carbontracker.org/reports/the-futures-not-in-plastics/
Keywords: microplastics, Plastics, Environmental Context, Greenhouse gas emissions, Grey Literature
This is an important assessment of the future of plastics from a highly reputable international Climate think tank. Lifetime CO2 is estimated at an average of 5 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of plastics. It also imposes a massive “untaxed externality upon society of at least $1,000 per tonne ($350bn a year) from carbon dioxide, health costs, collection costs, and ocean pollution….plastic is responsible for roughly twice as much carbon dioxide per tonne as oil.” For Moreland Council a decision to avoid conversion of natural grass to synthetic turf is a substantial carbon and externality cost saving.
“Plastics drive growth. As demand growth drivers like transportation have fallen, so plastics make up all the expected growth in oil for petrochemicals, and are the largest driver of expected oil demand, with 95% and 45% of oil demand growth in the central forecasts of BP and the IEA.
Plastics are uniquely vulnerable. Plastics impose a massive untaxed externality upon society of at least $1,000 per tonne ($350bn a year) from carbon dioxide, health costs, collection costs, and ocean pollution. And yet 36% of plastic is used once and thrown away, 40% of plastics ends up in the environment, and less than 10% of plastic is really recycled. Polls by IPSOS indicate that 70-80% of people want radical action to change this.”
“Every year, the world uses 4,500 mt of oil and 1,000 mt of petrochemical feedstocks but only around 350 mt 2 of plastics. Nevertheless, plastics play a key role in the petrochemical and oil industries.
“As set out in the IEA’s seminal report on the future of petrochemicals, there are thousands of uses of petrochemicals, in two main areas – plastics and fertilizers. In this note, we focus specifically on the petrochemical demand for oil. We show as below that plastics make up two thirds of demand for oil in the petrochemical sector and all of the growth in demand for oil.”
“There are technology solutions. There are three main solutions – reduce demand through better design and regulation; substitute with other products such as paper; and massively increase recycling. A recently published report, “Breaking the Plastic Wave” shows how to implement these solutions to deliver 2040 plastic utility at half the capital cost, half the virgin plastic, 25% less GHG emissions and 700,000 more jobs relative to BAU by 2040.”
“Carbon dioxide
Carbon is produced at each stage of the plastic value chain: to produce oil; to convert into resins; and at the end of life when plastic is burnt, buried or recycled. A very detailed analysis of the issue by Zheng et al in Nature Climate Change in 2019 suggested that the total carbon footprint of plastics was 4.4 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of plastics. “Breaking the Plastic Wave” estimates the carbon footprint per tonne based on its final disposal method as below; if we multiply this by the share of plastic ending up in each area, it averages out a little higher at just over 5 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of plastics. In any event, a good rule of thumb number is likely to be 5 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of plastic. To put this into context, the World Energy Outlook in 2019 notes that the CO2 emissions of the 4,500 mt of oil used in 2018 were 11,500 mt, or 2.6 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of oil; so plastic is responsible for roughly twice as much carbon dioxide per tonne as oil.”
“If we assume 350 mt of plastic demand with a total carbon footprint of around 5 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of plastic, that implies annual emissions of 1.75 Gt of CO2. Continuation of current growth rates would see the carbon footprint of plastics double by the middle of century to around 3.5 Gt. Meanwhile, the Paris Agreement implies that in order to get to 1.5 degrees, global CO2 emissions (33 Gt from the energy sector in 2018) will have to halve by 2030 and get to zero by the middle of the century. “Breaking the Plastic Wave” estimates that the plastic sector alone would therefore use up 19% of the entire global carbon budget if it continued to grow under business as usual. To have one sector planning on doubling its carbon footprint while the rest of the world plans to phase out emissions clearly makes no sense. This provides a clear driver for policymakers to take action. Air pollution - Each stage of the production of plastic produces pollutants such as PM 2.5, SOX and NOX which are harmful to human health.”
Cardoso, Pedro., Philip S. Barton, Klaus Birkhofer, Filipe Chichorro, Charl Deacon, Thomas Fartmann, Caroline S. Fukushima, René Gaigher, Jan C. Habel, Caspar A. Hallmann, Matthew J. Hill, Axel Hochkirch, Mackenzie L. Kwak, Stefano Mammola, Jorge Ari Noriega, Alexander B. Orfinger, Fernando Pedraza, James S. Pryke, Fabio O. Roque, Josef Settele, John P. Simaika, Nigel E. Stork, Frank Suhling, Carlien Vorster, Michael J. Samways. Scientists' warning to humanity on insect extinctions. Biological Conservation, 2020; 108426 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108426
Keywords: Environmental context, biodiversity
Synthetic turf will have an adverse impact on insect life and soil biota. We need to keep in mind impacts on insect life due to scientific indications of a massive reduction of insects which has a trophic impact on higher levels of species. While replacing a grass oval with synthetic turf may be quite a marginal impact on insect numbers, it is part of a cumulative impact in urban areas of increasing hard built-up surfaces.
Celeiro M, Armada D, Ratola N, Dagnac T, de Boer J, Llompart M. (2021) Evaluation of chemicals of environmental concern in crumb rubber and water leachates from several types of synthetic turf football pitches. Chemosphere. 2021 May;270:128610. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128610. Epub 2020 Oct 19. PMID: 33121811. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128610
Keywords: Toxicity, synthetic turf, rubber, infill, pollution, health
A study from Portugal assessing 50 synthetic football pitches using crumb rubber infill and the health and environmental concerns of leachates.
“Results revealed the presence of most of the target PAHs in crumb rubber at total concentrations up to 57 m g g 1 , next to a high number of plasticizers and vulcanization agents. Runoff water collected from the football pitches contained up to 13 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) as well as other chemicals of environmental concern. In addition, continuous leaching of chemicals from the crumb rubber to the surrounding water was demonstrated. The transfer of target chemicals into the runoff water poses a potential risk for the aquatic environment.”
“However, the regulated levels for the eight ECHA (European Chemicals Agency) PAHs (B[a]P, D[ah]A, B[e]P, B[a]A, CHY, B[b]F, B[j]F, and(B[k]F) in rubber consumer products that can come into direct contact with the skin or the oral cavity such as toys are set at 1 m g g 1 or 0.5 m g g 1 (Barrero-Moreno et al., 2018). Due to the potential human health risk of the recycled rubber pitches and playgrounds, the European Commission limited, on September 2019, the total con-
centration of the eight ECHA PAHs to 20 m g g 1 in granules and mulches used in synthetic turf pitches and playgrounds (ECHA, 2019).”
The study concluded that “Runoff water samples collected from several of the studied sport facilities were also analyzed. The continuous leaching of these chemicals from the crumb rubber to the runoff water was simulated at lab-scale, as well. The results showed the presence of 30 of the 40 target compounds in the crumb rubber, including 14 of the 16 EPA PAHs, which reached total concentrations of 57 m g g 1 . Many of the PAHs reach concentrations above the limit of 1 m g g 1 that should fulfill plastic and rubber components that enter in repetitive contact with human skin, which could pose a health risk. In addition, plasticizers and other substances such as MBTZ that cause human toxicity and are included in the ECHA SVHCs list, were found in the samples.
“In the runoff water samples, 13 PAHs were detected reaching concentrations of 3.3 m g L 1 , as well as other hazardous compounds such as various phthalates considered as endocrine disruptors. The results demonstrated a continuous leaching of chemicals from the crumb rubber to surface water or other nearby water bodies, which represents a potential risk for the aquatic environment. In this context, there is a need to perform additional studies to gather more information. to evaluate how can affect aquatic pollution.
“It is worth underlining the scarce or no information available about the materials used in these sport facilities. It would be then valuable to ask suppliers to provide more information about the crumb rubber characteristics, which would help to draw conclusions. Definitely, it is essential to have comprehensive information and data on all these aspects for the proper assessment of the not negligible risk posed by these sports field infill materials, both to human health and to the aquatic environment.”
Cheng, H., Hu, Y.,Reinhard, M., Environmental and health impacts of artificial turf: A review. (2014) Environ. Sci. Technol. 48, 2114–2129 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1021/es4044193
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es4044193
Keywords: Health, synthetic turf, Toxicity,
A widely cited authoritative literature review from 2014. There has been further research done on: life cycle assessment of water use, energy, greenhouse gas emissions; leaching of heavy metals and organic contaminants and the risks to human health and to biota in local waterways. The review calls for more research in several of these areas.
It notes zinc as one of several hazardous heavy metals. A typical soccer pitch/field can contain a total of 1.2 tonnes of zinc:
“The impacts of artificial turf fields on the environment are expected to be localized but last throughout their functional lifetimes. To predict the long-term impacts of artificial turf fields and help designing appropriate environmental safeguards, it is necessary to understand the environmental release of toxic metals (e.g., Zn, Pb, and Cd) and organic contaminants (e.g., PAHs) on a fundamental basis. Heavy metals are non degradable in comparison with organic contaminants, and hence persist in the recipient environment. Thus the accumulation of heavy metals released from artificial turf fields over long-term is of particular concern. The high contents of ZnO, and to a lesser degree, PbO and CdO, in the tire rubber crumb present a significant point source of these hazardous substances. A typical soccer pitch/field can contain a total of 1.2 tonnes of zinc (assuming the rubber crumb has an average ZnO content of 1.5%). It has been estimated that under natural conditions 10−40% of the Zn could be released from the fine tire debris (<100 μm) mixed in soils within one year.”
On the risks to human health it says that “Overall, studies evaluating end points in both children and adults consistently found that the tire rubber crumb in playgrounds and artificial turf fields poses low risk to human health through oral exposure.” But it also calls for more research: “It is also important to assess more systematically the risk posed by the tire rubber crumb on the environment and human health.”
It provides a table of the comparison of the benefits and disadvantages of Natural Grass and Artificial Turf.
Absent from this review: is any discussion of the urban heat island impact on local residents or heat health implications for those that use the artificial surfaces for sport or recreation, except in the briefest mentions of the need to cool artificial turf during summer. It also ignores the local impact on birdlife.
What this study doesn’t provide at all is the meta context of a world grappling with a climate crisis, a biodiversity crisis, and a plastic pollution crisis.
Climate Council (February 2021), Game, Set, Match: Calling Time on Climate Inaction, ISBN 978-1-922404-14-5 (digital), https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/resources/game-set-match-sports-climate-change/
Keywords: Environmental context, Sports, Grey Literature, Australia
Does not mention specific playing surfaces, although it highlights the SEA (Sports Environment Alliance) (2020) report in a Highlight Box. Outlines the climate science on how climate change will impact sport in Australia and globally. While the report lists a ban on fossil fuel sponsorship, it fails to mention phasing out fossil fuel infrastructure petrochemical products such as synthetic turf.
Coutts, A.M., Jason Beringer, Nigel J. Tapper, (2008) Investigating the climatic impact of urban planning strategies through the use of regional climate modelling: a case study for Melbourne, Australia. International Journal of Climatology. DOI: 10.1002/joc.1680
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.1680/abstract
Keywords: environmental context, heat, Australia, Melbourne
Summary: Discusses the urban heat island (UHI) in relation to using Melbourne urban planning for improving local climate and human health outcomes and highlights the need for a comprehensive UHI mitigation strategy for Melbourne. The authors used an urban climate model, The Air Pollution Model (TAPM), to simulate the UHI intensity of 3–4 °C at 2 a.m. in January. Results for summer showed increased housing density results in increased intensity of night time UHI with growth areas and activity centres particularly affected. The model was calibrated against observational data from medium density Preston, a residential neighborhood in Melbourne's north. This was used to assess where urban planning should best be applied to mitigate UHI to improve local climates and identified in particular activity centres and growth areas.
Critique: Valuable modelling of UHI in Melbourne, although winter correlation was poor with the authors highlighting that further refinements of the model were required to use as a tool for year round urban climate modelling for urban planning in Melbourne. The research doesn’t specifically cite what role of synthetic turf in adding to night time ambient air canopy temperatures.
Coutts AM, Tapper NJ, Beringer J, Loughnan M, Demuzere M (2012) Watering our cities: the capacity for water sensitive urban design to support urban cooling and improve human thermal comfort in the Australian context. Prog Phys Geogr 37(1):2–28 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0309133312461032
Keywords: water, WSUD, heat, UHIE, Australia, Melbourne.
This Melbourne based academic research does not mention artificial surfaces, but details the importance of Water Sensitive Urban Design and the Park Cool Island effect in moderating urban heat island microclimate temperatures.
“Upmanis et al. (1998) have shown that parks can be several degrees cooler than the surrounding urban area, in a feature known as the Park Cool Island (PCI). PCI intensity is often largest at night (like the UHI) and tends to increase with park size (Upmanis and Chen, 1999). Parks with extensive tree coverage tend to be cooler during the afternoon due to shading effects, while more open parks with turf are cooler at night due to greater long-wave radiative cooling.”
Comment: Other studies have shown artificial surfaces heat up and maintain high temperatures throughout the day and start cooling through the evening. See Loveday et al 2019 which highlighted how the canopy air temperatures change at night, given that there is less convective mixing at night, so artificial turf exacerbates evening UHIE temperatures when people are trying to cool their homes. More research is needed on synthetic turf impact on night-time UHIE.
Delaware Riverkeeper Network, Alternative Infills for Artificial Turf Fact Sheet, (October 2016) http://www.synturf.org/images/DRK3_Artificial_Turf_Alternative_Infill_Fact_Sheet_10.18.16_0.pdf
Keywords: Synthetic turf, infill, Grey literature
There has been little research on alternative infills to crumb rubber. The Consultants report to Moreland Council in the Sports Surface Needs Analysis recommended using an organic infill to counter community perceptions on the health and safety of crumb rubber infill. This Factsheet summarises some of the alternative infills available and highlights the open issues about use including on toxicology, off-gassing, leaching. One issue not addressed in this is the potential for alternative infill material being sourced from tropical locations driving land clearing, greenhouse gas emissions and biodiversity loss.
“Very few toxicological and risk assessment studies regarding the health and environmental impacts of emerging alternative infill options have been completed but from the data that is available there are many concerns to be had. While there is insufficient data on the chemical composition, off-gassing, leaching, and associated health and environmental effects that may result, the data that is available demonstrates many reasons for concern. For these reasons, the precautionary principle should be used to avoid the unnecessary and potentially devastating harms to those who would come in direct contact with the infills and the environment surrounding them. All alternative infill options are significantly more expensive than traditional crumb rubber; with all artificial turf systems (including those with crumb rubber infill) costing more than natural turf grass.xlv There is no proven record of the durability, performance, and lifespan of these infills to warrant the cost—and many anecdotal references from schools and municipalities throughout the country illustrate flaws.
“While shock absorption and temperature stability of different alternative infills vary, natural grass fields are still preferable and safer playing surfaces for athletes. And while organic infill materials will likely eliminate most or all chemical exposure concerns due to the infill itself, other components of an artificial turf system are still likely sources of chemical exposure to players and surrounding ecosystems, in addition to other environmental concerns—including increased stormwater due loss of pervious surface and/or evapotranspiration; toxins leaching from synthetic grass fibers and/or pads; migration of infill materials and turf fibers into waterways; leaching of algaecides, pesticides, disinfectants; and an increased greenhouse gas footprint.”
Díaz, S. et al. (December 2019) Pervasive human-driven decline of life on Earth points to the need for transformative change. Science 366, eaax3100 (2019). https://science.sciencemag.org/content/366/6471/eaax3100
Keywords: Biodiversity, Environmental context
An important meta article on the decline of life on earth and the loss of biodiversity. Articulates that we need to reverse this process for our own health and wellbeing.
“For decades, scientists have been raising calls for societal changes that will reduce our impacts on nature. Though much conservation has occurred, our natural environment continues to decline under the weight of our consumption…. The fabric of life on which we all depend—nature and its contributions to people—is unravelling rapidly. Despite the severity of the threats and lack of enough progress in tackling them to date, opportunities exist to change future trajectories through transformative action. Such action must begin immediately, however, and address the root economic, social, and technological causes of nature’s deterioration.”
Conversion of a natural grass sports oval that supports some biodiversity and provides environmental services, as well as recreation and organised sport use, to a synthetic pitch epitomises at the micro level what is happening to varying degrees at the landscape and global level.
Eadie, Rachel (18 April 2021), ‘We’re running out of space’: Turf wars heat up over synthetic grass, The Age, Accessed 18 April 2021 https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/we-re-running-out-of-space-turf-wars-heat-up-over-synthetic-grass-20210413-p57itd.html .
Keywords: Grey literature, microplastics, heat, UHIE, Australia, Melbourne
News report in the Age highlighting that demand for conversion of grass sporting fields to synthetic turf is a result of State Government not doing adequate planning for open space and sporting facilities, particularly in inner urban suburbs, as part of urban development and planning. Mentions Moreland Council 14 April motion on commissioning a consultants report on environmental and health impacts of synthetic turf being narrowly voted down.
It uses the account by Port Phillip Baykeeper Neil Blake highlighting windblown and stormwater pollution of Darebin Creek with synthetic grass blades from from replacement of synthetic turf at KP Hardiman Reserve on Plenty Road, Kingsbury, since October 2020.
"On the worst days, after strong winds, Mr Blake found 300 to 400 tufts of plastic grass in 90 minutes of trawling." Those tufts could pollute Darebin Creek which flows into the Yarra River and out to pollute the waters of Port Philip Bay.
The heat retention and Urban heat island effect was also discussed, and greenhouse gas emissions, reduces biodiversity, increases landfill, and limits informal active recreation use by the community, including dog walking, were very briefly mentioned.
Englart, John (February 2015) Climate change and heatwaves in Melbourne - a Review DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.1.3050.7688 https://takvera.blogspot.com/2015/02/climate-change-and-heatwaves-in.html
Keywords: Environmental context, heat, grey literature, Australia, Moreland.
This review article provides important science background on climate change, heatwaves, the application of the urban heat island effect for Melbourne.
Englart, John (November 2020), Taking the temperature of Moreland Playgrounds and surfaces, Climate Action Moreland, 24 November, 2020, https://climateactionmoreland.org/2020/11/24/taking-the-temperature-of-moreland-playgrounds-and-surfaces/
Synthetic turf, Natural turf, synthetic turf, heat, UHIE, Australia, grey literature, Moreland.
Local Moreland temperature survey from Clifton Park synthetic field and surrounds. The surface temperature at Clifton Park was measured. On a sunny day with the air temperature at 32/33 degrees C., wind gusting at 10 km/hr and humidity at 15%, natural grass in full sun was compared to synthetic turf in full sun and in shade and a concrete path in full sun. Results:
Natural grass in full sun - 29.6 to 30.9 degrees C.
Concrete path in full sun - 43.1 to 47.7 degrees C.
Synthetic turf in full sun - 57.1 to 60.4 degrees C.
Only when in full tree canopy shade was the temperature of synthetic turf comparable to natural grass in full sun - 29.3 to 30.4 degrees C.(8)
Full Temperature Data can be viewed here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1FUgd1VjkiQjW9t7TqvyXbro_cqXlRfc6t83ylSBX4S4/edit?usp=sharing
European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), (9 December, 2020), Scientific committees: EU-wide restriction best way to reduce microplastic pollution, ECHA/PR/20/09 https://echa.europa.eu/-/scientific-committees-eu-wide-restriction-best-way-to-reduce-microplastic-pollution
Keywords: Grey Literature, synthetic turf, microplastics, infill, policy,
Committee for Socio-economic Analysis (SEAC) opinion on restricting microplastics use, including infill on sporting fields. This includes a proposed ban on infill with a 6 year transition period, or implementation of risk management measures with a 3 year transition. It follows a similar opinion by the Committee on Risk. This opinion will be taken to the European Commission and will also be scrutinised by the European Parliament during 2021.
“Restrictions under the REACH Regulation are proposed by the European Commission, voted by the EU Member States in the REACH Committee and scrutinised by the Council and the European Parliament.”
“What is proposed as a means to control microplastic pollution from the granular
infill material used on artificial turf sports pitches?
“The granular rubber infill material added on artificial turf sports pitches is the largest single source of emissions – in the scope of ECHA’s restriction proposal – with releases of up to 16 000 tonnes each year. In its proposal, ECHA introduces two options to address the spreading of infill material from pitches. These are:
1) a ban on placing on the market after a transition period of six years after the entry into
force; or
2) mandatory use of risk management measures (such as fences, brushes) to prevent the loss of infill from the pitches after a transition period of three years. You can see
examples of infill containment in the annex to the background document, pages 360-
362.
The two scientific committees have evaluated these options and given their recommendations.”
Eykelbosh, Angela (December 2019), Artificial turf: The contributions and limits of toxicology in decision-making, EHR Vol. 62(4) 106–111 DOI: 10.5864/d2019-026 https://pubs.ciphi.ca/doi/full/10.5864/d2019-026
Keywords: Health, toxicity, risk
Discusses the issues of toxicity hazards and health risk and public perceptions around artificial turf health risk. Argues that many studies have found the health risk is minimal, yet the public perception is still coloured by media reports. Also highlights that on the health issue cancer is not the only concern. “if we want to understand the impacts of artificial turf on health, we must consider impacts on players’ musculoskeletal injuries, head injuries, thermal stress, and infections—all of which are active areas of research.”
Argues that synthetic turf may enable greater physical activity, which brings a population health benefit: “We must also factor in the risks and benefits of allowing more people to engage in physical activity, both per day and throughout the year compared with natural turf. This is by far the largest “gap” in artificial turf research: the amount of healthy physical activity that can be supported on various types of outdoor sports fields (bare earth, turf, artificial turf, asphalt, etc.), and what impact this activity has on public health.”
Comment: artificial turf may enhance physical activity for a very narrow range of people, and may actually reduce active informal recreational activity by reducing open space to a much broader cohort. Certainly more research is needed on this. The social statistics on community physical activity may be heavily skewed.
The author highlights that health is just one lens for decision making on artificial turf: “the artificial turf debate does not only concern health. Playing fields have wider impacts on communities, in terms of equitable access to play space, the costs of maintenance, water usage, contribution to the urban heat island effect, the ability to absorb water and retain run-off during flood season, the threat of fire, impacts on nutrient runoff, the risk of microplastic pollution, the energetic and greenhouse gas costs of installing or removing artificial turfs, and so on. Given all this, it’s easy to see that the choice of playing surface may not be clear cut for many communities.”
Eunomia Research & Consulting Ltd for FIFA, (March 2017), Environmental Impact Study on Artificial Football Turf, https://football-technology.fifa.com/en/media-tiles/environmental-impact-study-on-artificial-football-turf/
Keywords: Grey Literature, microplastics, waste, synthetic turf, infill, rubber, Environmental context, Sports
A report done for the global soccer federation - FIFA. Highlights lack of recycling and reuse, usually landfill used for disposal. Most materials in a synthetic field are fossil fuel based. It doesn’t document the difference in environmental impact between natural grass and artificial turf. Highlights “organic alternatives to plastic based products come with their own problems - for example the growing of non-food crops to produce products can displace food production, and ultimately extend the agricultural frontier, leading to reduced biodiversity.”
For marine microplastics it says “More recently plastic infill (including SBR, TPE and EPDM) has been identified as a possible source for microplastic marine pollution. Infill can get washed away during rain or stick to clothing and boots before being put in a washing machine. ... It is estimated that 1–4% of plastic infill is lost and replaced every year.”
All synthetic turf in Australia currently ends up in landfill, although due to different landfill charges and taxes it is sometimes transported to a different state where landfill is much cheaper. “A standard pitch containing SBR infill could weight around 274 tonnes. This is the amount of material that will need to be disposed of or recycled when the pitch reaches the end of its life.”
“There are no reports of organic infill pitches being recycled at present.”
“majority of the manufacturers interviewed for this study claimed their products are ‘recyclable’, but none are taking significant steps to make sure this happens in practice.”
Football Federation Victoria, (2018), State Football Facilities Strategy to 2026
https://www.footballvictoria.com.au/sites/ffv/files/2018-12/FV_Facilities_Strategy.pdf
Keywords: Grey Literature, synthetic turf, Sports, policy
The strategy to increase both grass and synthetic soccer pitches in Victoria. There is no commitment to sustainable outcomes addressed in this strategy. A synthetic pitch has a 2:1 equivalence value - double the time can be allocated. The report casts a rosy picture of benefits: economic, health, social, financial. There are no negatives, such as light pollution, the environmental and greenhouse gas emissions of synthetic pitches, the traffic and parking issues generated in many residential neighborhoods by the growth of the sport.
It has has a goal “Increase the number of senior sized artificial pitches from 53 to 84 with priority for the inner LGAs who currently do not have any, such as Bayside, Boroondara, Stonnington and Yarra (where the opportunity for acquiring new land is limited and there are no artificial pitches). Other metro LGAs without senior sized artificial pitches to prioritise include Casey, Frankston, Greater Dandenong and Mornington Peninsula”. It recommends Pitch capacity for well constructed grass as 26 hours, and double this for a synthetic pitch
In Moreland it identifies Cross Keys Reserve – Strathmore; and De Chene Reserve – Coburg as potential upgrade/development sites. Currently there are 10 pitches in Moreland. The strategy is pushing for an extra 6 pitches for Moreland by 2026 based on projected participation growth rate. “Moreland will require 16 pitches, the most in the zone based on current participation, by 2026” The Strategy lists a new Moreland synthetic pitch as a priority.
Gomes, F.O., Rocha, M.R., Alves, A., Ratola, N. (2021), A review of potentially harmful chemicals in crumb rubber used in synthetic football pitches, Journal of Hazardous Materials Volume 409, 5 May 2021, 124998. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0304389420329897
Keywords: Synthetic turf, rubber, infill, toxicity
(From the abstract only) the study highlights dangerous levels of toxic chemicals via air pollution and leachates into water pollution : “
* Crumb rubber (CR) from recycling end-of-life tires is used as synthetic turf infill;
* Potentially hazardous chemicals were reviewed in CR, water leachates and nearby air;
* 8-carcinogenic PAH levels from 1.91 to 24.67 ± 18.31 mg/kg surpass the legislated limit;
* Zn was the prevalent metal, up to 15,494 mg/kg in CR and 34,170 μg/L in water leachates;
* Other contaminants linked to tire making like VOCs, plasticizers or PCBs were found.”
Greenplay Organics, (July 2012), Naturally Cool Synthetic Turf, 3BL CSR newswire. https://www.csrwire.com/press_releases/34424-naturally-cool-synthetic-turf
Keywords: Grey Literature, Synthetic turf, infill, heat, water, irrigation
Report that a synthetic field organic infill material developed by Italian sports turf company Limonta SPA, made up primarily of cork and coconut fibre, was able to limit temperatures to only slightly higher than natural grass. This cooling relies on regular weekly irrigation as the organic turf infill has a moisture carrying capacity which provides the cooling effect.
“Recently completed outdoor testing at the ISA Sport USA Lab in Lubbock, TX further substantiates the fact that Limonta Sport synthetic turf with organic InfillPro Geo© greatly reduces the surface temperature of the synthetic playing field to the point where it is compatible to playing on natural grass.” You can read the testing report here by ISA Sports in the US. http://www.synturf.org/images/ISA_LAB_Temp_Study_-_Copy.pdf
There was an earlier testing report from 2010 done at Università IUAV di Venezia which backed Limonta’s claim that the corkonut infill was running substantially cooler than rubber infill.The Synturf alternative infill page (http://www.synturf.org/alternativeinfill.html ) contains the report: http://www.synturf.org/images/Limonta_Sport_Temperature_Comparison_Test_GEO_vs_Natural_vs_SBR.PDF
Comment: Water conservation is seen as an important justification for the transition from natural grass to synthetic. The ISA Sports test results on comparing the Limonta Sports synthetic turf with organic Infill with a synthetic field with rubber infill and Natural grass has implications for water use of synthetic fields. "Even under the most intense heat and with no naturally occurring precipitation we feel that the field will require no more than 12,000 gallons of water applied twice a week for the field to perform optimally." That translates as 1,200 kgals per year. A Natural grass field will use about 1,290 kgals per year, according to Alm (2016). Kanaan et al (2020) argue that synthetic field water use for managing field temperatures is comparable to the water requirements of a natural grass field. If Organic infill is used for a new sporting field, increased water use needs to be also part of the equation. Original source of the infill fibres need consideration to ensure this isn’t causing emissions associated with landclearing and biodiversity impacts at source.
Hamido, S. , Guertal, E. and Wesley Wood, C. (2016) Carbon Sequestration under Warm Season Turfgrasses in Home Lawns. Journal of Geoscience and Environment Protection, 4, 53-63. doi: 10.4236/gep.2016.49005 https://www.scirp.org/journal/paperinformation.aspx?paperid=70666
Keywords: Carbon sequestration, Natural turf
This study indicates that turfgrass home lawns may be an important contribution to the global carbon sequestration level. Different species of warm season grasses sequester carbon at different rates. “Major sources of Soil Organic Carbon accumulation are from below ground plant root activities and above ground biomass decomposition.”
“Carbon storage in lawns could also be increased by reducing mowing, and returning clippings. This study found that zoysiagrass had greater above- and below-ground biomass that resulted in greater C inputs to the soil than other warm-season turfgrasses, likely due to the individual or combined effects of species and plant density. However, more research is needed on inputs such as litter quality and quantity, mowing, irrigation and clipping management to better quantify C flux in home lawns.”
Hanski, Ilkka., von Hertzen, Leena., Fyhrquist, Nanna., Koskinen, Kaisa., Torppa, Kaisa., Laatikainen, Tiina., Karisola, Piia., Auvinen, Petri., Paulin, Lars., Mäkelä, Mika J., Vartiainen, Erkki., Kosunen, Timo U., Alenius, Harri., and Haahtela, Tari., (April 2012) Environmental biodiversity, human microbiota, and allergy are interrelated, PNAS May 22, 2012 109 (21) 8334-8339; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1205624109
Keywords: health, microbial, Natural turf
There is evidence that contact with natural grass and soil has a positive effect on human health for allergies and auto-immune response. Converting natural grass sporting fields to synthetic surfaces reduces this positive effect. This 2012 study highlights that environmental biodiversity, human microbiota, and allergy are interrelated. As Moreland population density grows natural spaces, including grass sporting ovals, will provide an important point in boosting children’s immune systems. The study concludes: “Interactions with natural environmental features not only may increase general human well being in urban areas (45), but also may enrich the commensal microbiota and enhance its interaction with the immune system, with far-reaching consequences for public health.”
Hardin, Garrett (1968). "The Tragedy of the Commons". Science. 162 (3859): 1243–1248. Bibcode:1968Sci...162.1243H. doi:10.1126/science.162.3859.1243 . PMID 5699198
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/sci/162/3859/1243.full.pdf
Keywords: Environmental context
A classic science article that articulates that we all to often focus on the benefits accruing to individuals or small groups in exploiting a common resource in the short term, rather than regulating usage to ensure impacts and damages are limited and the resource can continue to deliver shared benefits over the long term. We need to factor in externalities and costs and regulate the usage of individuals or specific groups. This philosophically applies to the situation at Hosken Reserve with the oval and east pitch being unfenced and shared by the community for active recreation and experiencing nature with the Sports Club for training and the school for use for sports and for lunchtime.
Hatfield, J. (2017), Turfgrass and Climate Change. Agronomy Journal, 109: 1708-1718. https://doi.org/10.2134/agronj2016.10.0626
Keywords: Natural turf, Greenhouse Gas emissions, carbon sequestration, water, irrigation
Turf grasses will also feel the impact of climate change. This article outlines some of the issues facing natural turfgrass in a changing climate, with increasing temperatures and changing precipitation as it applies to the USA.
“The potential warming of soil temperatures has the potential to increase soil temperatures above the optimum root temperatures of 10 to 18°C for cool-season species and above 24 to 30°C in warm-season species (DaCosta and Huang, 2013). They cautioned that given the projections for temperature increases coupled with the potential for extreme events, there
is the likelihood for more heat stress on both cool- and warm-season species.”
“The interplay between root temperatures and air temperatures in the physiological reactions of grasses reveal that exposure to high root temperatures reduces shoot growth, photosynthesis, root viability, and increases senescence (DaCosta and Huang, 2013). Heat stress reduces root number, root length, and root biomass and increases root mortality, which in turn affects the ability of the plant to extract water and nutrients from the soil.”
“Xin et al. (2013) suggested that screening turfgrass species for water use efficiency and drought resistance using a combination of phenotypic studies (morphology, growth rate, and cell physiology), gene quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping for the morphological and physiological characteristics of different species, and quantifying the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of water use efficiency in turfgrass would provide a path toward breeding genotypes to withstand drought stress.”
“Increased CO 2 effects on water use efficiency would increase the number of days a perennial grass could maintain non-limiting transpiration, thereby, making more efficient use of water in the soil profile. This would reduce exposure to potential drought stress for a perennial grass, which will become increasingly important in water-limited environments or with more variation in summer precipitation.
“Turfgrass stands have the potential to mitigate climate change by sequestering C and reducing greenhouse gas emissions from turfgrass stands. Bremer (2006) found nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emissions were a function of N management practices with N rate being the primary factor related to emissions. There have been some recent assessments of the value of turfgrass stands to sequester C and through a modeling assessment for lawns, Zirkle et al. (2011) showed the potential sequestration rate.”
IPBES (2019): Summary for policymakers of the global assessment report on biodiversity and ecosystem services of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. S. Díaz, J. Settele, E. S. Brondízio E.S., H. T. Ngo, M. Guèze, J. Agard, A. Arneth, P. Balvanera, K. A. Brauman, S. H. M. Butchart, K. M. A. Chan, L. A. Garibaldi, K. Ichii, J. Liu, S. M. Subramanian, G. F. Midgley, P. Miloslavich, Z. Molnár, D. Obura, A. Pfaff, S. Polasky, A. Purvis, J. Razzaque, B. Reyers, R. Roy Chowdhury, Y. J. Shin, I. J. Visseren-Hamakers, K. J. Willis, and C. N. Zayas (eds.). IPBES secretariat, Bonn, Germany. 56 pages. https://www.ipbes.net/sites/default/files/2020-02/ipbes_global_assessment_report_summary_for_policymakers_en.pdf
Keywords: biodiversity, Environmental Context, policy
Major report by Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) outlining that nature and ecosystems have deteriorated worldwide, with the process accelerating in the last 50 years. It argues we need to make transformative changes across economic, social, political and technological factors for conserving and sustainably using nature and achieving sustainability. This provides a meta context for preserving the grass oval for its limited biodiversity values in an urban environment.
IPCC, (2018): Summary for Policymakers. In: Global Warming of 1.5°C. An IPCC Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels and related global greenhouse gas emission pathways, in the context of strengthening the global response to the threat of climate change, sustainable development, and efforts to eradicate poverty [Masson-Delmotte, V., P. Zhai, H.-O. Pörtner, D. Roberts, J. Skea, P.R. Shukla, A. Pirani, W. Moufouma-Okia, C. Péan, R. Pidcock, S. Connors, J.B.R. Matthews, Y. Chen, X. Zhou, M.I. Gomis, E. Lonnoy, T. Maycock, M. Tignor, and T. Waterfield (eds.)]. In Press. https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/sites/2/2019/05/SR15_SPM_version_report_LR.pdf
Keywords: Environmental context, policy
This Special report by the IPCC, published in 2018 was significant it drawing wide public attention to the trends in climate change and the need to take rapid and ambitious action if we are to avoid more catastrophic impacts in the future. It outlines the strong need to address climate action and reduce greenhouse gas emissions at all levels of society from all sectors.
Itten, René., Glauser, Lukas., and Stucki, Matthias., (Jan 2021) Life Cycle Assessment of Artificial and Natural Turf Sports Fields – Executive Summary , Institute of Natural Resource Sciences, Zurich University of Applied Sciences. https://digitalcollection.zhaw.ch/bitstream/11475/21510/3/2021_Itten-etal_LCA-turf-sports-fields_Executive-Summary.pdf
Keywords: LCA, Synthetic turf, natural turf, Greenhouse gas emissions
This study uses the ecological scarcity method for LCA analysis for calculating relative greenhouse gas emissions comparing natural grass to synthetic turf based on usage hours. The “aim of the city of Zurich to reduce both the primary energy consumption and the greenhouse gas emissions that are produced by each resident.”
It recommended optimistion of current sports fields use first, then the field type for construction selected according to projected intensity of use, with synthetic for high use, natural grass for low use, based upon its assessment of Total environmental impacts in eco-points per hour of use score.
“However, since natural and hybrid turf allows for fewer hours of use, on average an artificial turf causes lower greenhouse gas emissions and a lower total environmental impacts per hour of use according to the Ecological Scarcity Method than a natural or hybrid turf. A natural turf with a drainage layer construction, which is played on for 800 hours per year, causes approximately the same amount of greenhouse gas emissions per hour of use as an unfilled artificial turf, which is played on for 1,600 hours. However, if an unfilled artificial turf is only used for 800 hours per year, it causes significantly more greenhouse gas emissions per hour of use than a natural grass turf with a drainage layer or a hybrid turf.”
“The filled artificial turf sports field has the highest environmental impacts per hour of use for
greenhouse gas emissions, freshwater eutrophication, mineral resource use as well as total primary energy demand and non-renewable primary energy demand, mainly due to the required filling material. The replacement as well as the disposal of the filling material causes additional impacts for the filled artificial turf sports fields in the renovation and operation life cycle stages. Furthermore, the filled artificial turf sports field causes microplastic emissions due to the discharge of filling material. There is no established methodology to account for the environmental impacts caused by microplastic emissions recommended by the Joint Research Council of the European Commission for the Organisational and Product Environmental Footprint (Fazio et al., 2018). Therefore, the microplastic emissions are not represented in Fig. S.1.”
Comment: This makes a reasonable argument that based on usage hours synthetic turf can have less environmental impact than natural grass. But this assumes that the greenhouse gas emissions can all be mitigated. What matters in addressing climate is avoiding total emissions, or finding ways to mitigate it. We need to stop building emissions intensive infrastructure, unless we can also mitigate those emissions elsewhere.
Under the triple bottom line accounting this study still weights social outcomes above environmental outcomes. This is only the executive summary and does not contain specific data, which may be in the full report in German.
The executive summary highlights that microplastics impact is not included in the analysis. Also this study appears to have not discussed surface temperature/urban heat island effect, probably as this is seen to have little current relevance to the geographic location of Zurich, but perhaps it is in the full study (in German). The report makes clear that Fertiliser use on Natural turf has high embedded energy and contributes to eutrophication of waterways. So the management regime for fertiliser use may have a substantial impact in the comparison. The report also ignores impact on soil biota, biodiversity and some health impacts such as infection risk, lower extremity injuries, heat stress.
Jim, C. Y., 2017. Intense summer heat fluxes in artificial turf harm people and environment. Landscape and Urban Planning, Volume 157, pp. 561-576 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2016.09.012
Keywords: Heat, UHIE, synthetic turf, health
Research in Hong Kong in 2017 highlighted that high air and surface temperature of artificial turf raises concerns on player health. Artificial turf with low specific heat and moisture incurs fast heating and cooling. The study identified cooler periods fit for matches on sunny, cloudy and overcast days.
“ AT materials, with low specific heat and moisture and scanty evapotranspiration, induce fast warming and cooling with little time lag to synchronize with insolation rhythm. On sunny day, AT turf-surface, heated to 72.4 °C comparing with NT at 36.6 °C, dissipates heat by conduction and convection to near-ground air and by strong ground-thermal emission. Exceeding the heat-stress threshold most of the time, AT cools quickly from late afternoon for heat-safe use soon after sunset. On cloudy day, subdued AT heating allows earlier cooling in late afternoon. Both sites are heat-safe on overcast day.”
Joshi, Ketan (February 2021) Plastics: A carbon copy of the climate crisis, Client Earth. https://www.clientearth.org/latest/latest-updates/stories/plastics-a-carbon-copy-of-the-climate-crisis/ Accessed 27 February 2021.
Keywords: Grey Literature, Environmental context, microplastics
A general or Meta-article to highlight the problem with plastics used on an industrial product scale. Argues that the plastics crisis is equal to the climate crisis. Synthetic turf fibres and mats degrade into smaller and smaller plastics that contribute to the micro-plastics problem we have.
Kamal, Masud., (December 2019), Natural grass vs synthetic surfaces for recreation and sports: An evidence review. DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.20840.08969 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/342852314_Natural_grass_vs_synthetic_surfaces_for_recreation_and_sports_An_evidence_review
Keywords: Synthetic turf, Natural turf, Australia
A study weighing up the benefits and disadvantages of synthetic turf and natural grass sports fields for Adelaide. It covers the issues reasonably well, although there are a couple of points based on very recent science and poor referencing. On Water use it references Cheng et al (2014) which is a literature review. I would have preferred to see direct references as water use with total life cycle assessment (LCA) is far more complex than Cheng makes out. On public health and safety there is now evidence of health risk as per Xu et al.(2019). This study sets out to provide a knowledge base for decision making for “the selection of a surface option in Adelaide Parklands for engaging more people in outdoor sports needs to consider the long-term vision for parkland management and sustainability.” It articulates the organised sports drivers for increasing synthetic turf to increase pitch use and wear, but fails to also articulate the wider social considerations with regards to the climate crisis and plastics pollution crisis. This context is just as important in triple bottom line decision making.
Kanaan, Ahmed, Sevostianova, Elena, Leinauer, Bernd and Sevostianov, Igor (August 2020), Water Requirements for Cooling Artificial Turf, in Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, August 2020 DOI link: https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)IR.1943-4774.0001506
Keywords: Synthetic turf, water, heat, irrigation
This study would appear to reduce the water savings argument for synthetic turf. It is based upon experimental data from New Mexico and confirms a water usage for cooling model that Synthetic Turf and Natural turf water usage may be comparable during the maintenance part of the total life cycle assessment. Synthetic turf is also water intensive during manufacture using 4 times the quantity of water as needed for one year of natural turf irrigation according to Alm (2016)
“This model indicates that the amount of water required to maintain AT temperatures at levels comparable to irrigated NT over a 24-h period exceed the water requirements of bermudagrass NT in the same environment. Thus, the argument for using AT- instead of bermudagrass-based NT in arid climate zones for water conservation is nuanced and depends on the presence of an irrigation system, desired playing conditions, and the length of time irrigation will be used to maintain the target temperature during daylight hours.”
Khalid, Noreen., Aqeel, Muhammad., Noman, Ali.,(2020) Microplastics could be a threat to plants in terrestrial systems directly or indirectly, Environmental Pollution, Volume 267, 2020, 115653, ISSN 0269-7491, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115653. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0269749120363417)
Keywords: microplastics, synthetic turf, pollution. plants, biodiversity
A useful recent review of microplastics and terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem impacts especially to follow other recent research. Provides useful tables on Impacts of microplastics on plants (Table 1), Impacts of microplastics on soil biota (Table 2), Impact of microplastics and sorbed organic and inorganic chemicals on terrestrial organisms and plants (Table 3). This study highlights that microplastics could:
alter the physicochemical properties of the soil.
Altered soil structure could impact plant community composition.
cause toxicity in plants directly through uptake via roots.
impact nutrient cycling by altering the C: N ratio of the soil.
Microplastics thermal properties could create a microclimate in the root zone in the soil.
“There is a growing body of concern about the adverse effects of MPs on soil-dwelling organisms such as microbes in mycorrhizae and earthworms that mediate essential ecosystem services. Environmental concentrations and effects of MPs are considered to increase with increasing trend of its global production.”
Komyakova, Valeriya., Joanna Vince and Marcus Haward (Dec 2020) Microplastics and the Australian Marine Environment: Issues and Options. Report to the National Environmental Science Program, Marine Biodiversity Hub. IMAS, University of Tasmania.
https://www.nespmarine.edu.au/document/microplastics-australian-marine-environment-issues-and-options
See also: Komyakova, Valeriya., Joanna Vince and Marcus Haward (Sep 2020) Primary microplastics in the marine environment: scale of the issue, sources, pathways and current policy, Report to the National Environmental Science Program, Marine Biodiversity Hub. IMAS, University of Tasmania. https://www.nespmarine.edu.au/document/primary-microplastics-marine-environment-scale-issue-sources-pathways-and-current-policy
Keywords: microplastics, pollution, marine, Australia, environmental context
This is an important contextual study on microplastics impact from University of Tasmania researchers. Synthetic turf contributes to microplastics pollution during its life and end of life disposal as landfill. Neither study refers directly to artificial sports fields, except in very brief mention in passing. While these reports are comprehensive in cataloging sources for marine microplastics, it ignores synthetic sporting fields as a source. New research from Australian Microplastic Assessment Project suggests that microplastics from synthetic sports fields is a growing problem in Australia (Power 2021)
“The impacts of microplastic contamination on human health, while of concern, are poorly
understood and are still being debated [37, 39-43]. There is some evidence that human
microplastics consumption has the potential to lead to inflammation, disruption to immune
function, neurotoxicity and some types of cancer, however experiments with human tissues
are still rare and largely suggestive [37, 42, 44-46]. Nevertheless, according to the
precautionary principle the current lack of evidence should not be a reason for disregarding
potential threats or for taking action to prevent the potential threat from occurring.
Microplastics are a suite of contaminants, with various properties and sources which enter
the environment through multiple pathways which makes their mitigation and management
difficult [26]. As such, there is a valid need to improve the management and mitigation of
these widespread pollutants.”
“Action is required on microplastics, given their high abundance, environmental availability,
global spread and possible negative impacts on marine biota and human health, and
absence of effective mitigation options [7, 11-13, 16, 18, 20, 21, 26, 75, 76]. Without
devaluing the importance of clean-up activities, this report focuses on preventative
measures. These measures are particularly pertinent given predictions of plastic waste
entering the ocean are expected to potentially triple in the next 20 to 30 years [5, 8-10, 77],
and since COVID-19 and the increase in use of single use plastics these estimates are now
seen as conservative [78]. Moreover, the small size and high rate of environmental
contamination make removal of microplastics from the marine environment notoriously
Difficult.
“The recent Pew Charitable Trusts report found that current actions and a ‘business as usual’
approach to plastic pollution will result in minimal reductions to plastic waste [77]. It suggests
that a greater scale of action is needed on behalf of governments and industry in driving
upstream and downstream action; both upstream and downstream solutions need to be
deployed simultaneously. The Pew report suggests that it is current inadequate regulatory
frameworks, business models and funding mechanisms, not technological solutions, that are
preventing the development of solutions to the plastic crisis. As a result there needs to be a
substantive shift of investment away from the production and conversion of virgin plastic; the
implementation of a new circular economy; different solutions for different regions and
priorities; and that changing from a ‘business as usual’ to a ‘systems change scenario’ will
have co-benefits for the climate, environment, economy and the UN Sustainable
Development Goals [77].”
Kong, Ling., Shi, Zhengjun,. Chu, L.M. (2013), Carbon emission and sequestration of urban turfgrass systems in Hong Kong. Science of the Total Environment 473-474 (2014) 132-138. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.12.012
Keywords: Carbon sequestration, Natural turf
“This study investigated the carbon storage and release of urban turfgrass systems using empirical data and determined the impact of maintenance in determining an urban lawn as a carbon sink or source.” It outlines that soil is the largest contributor to carbon storage in urban areas, however soil respiration also emits CO2 and is a major flux in the global carbon budget. It notes a positive correlation with soil carbon and site age in urban spaces with Soil Organic Carbon concentration higher in soils 25 years or older, but with a shift in storage from belowground to aboveground at 30-40 years after lawn construction. The study discussed “it is the practice of turf management that may ultimately decide whether the turf is a net emitter or sink for CO 2 . Thus, we propose that a rational design of maintenance schedule should be implemented for each turf based on its carbon stock and functional purposes to achieve a net carbon budget beneficial to the environment. The study suggested in the conclusion that turf maintenance carbon footprint be reduced: “For example, mowing, which uses fuel and is the most carbon intensive maintenance, should be carried out less often without compromising the quality of the turf or with more efficient technologies such as solar-powered devices to reduce carbon emission. Similarly, green technologies should be applied for more efficient watering and chemical application to reduce carbon emission. On the other hand, urban soil served as a carbon sink while management practices remained the major source of carbon emissions.
Since the carbon emission increased with age, the turfgrass systems could shift from carbon sink to carbon source in just a few years. Thus, one can certainly try to replace the turf which may renew the carbon sequestration capacity of the turfs.”
Kukfisz, B., (2018) “The degree of flammability for an artificial grass surface system”, in E3S Web of Conferences, vol. 45. doi:10.1051/e3sconf/20184500038
Keywords: Synthetic turf, fire risk, health
Flammability is not often raised as an issue with conversion of natural grass sports surfaces to synthetic surfaces. This study highlights the fire and possible health risks involved in synthetic surfaces. “As artificial turf is produced of plastics, it is a material clearly susceptible to ignition.”
“Taking into account the components of artificial turf systems, especially SBR from recycled tyres and plastics such as TPE and EPDM, there is an ever increasing concern for potential environmental and health hazards. The most important pollutants that can be released from synthetic surfaces and surfacing are compounds of zinc of the zinc oxide used as a catalyser in the vulcanisation process [2], using polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) as softeners [9], volatile compounds and such admixtures, as benzothiazole, as well as aniline and phenol [9, 10].”
One wonders if local residents have been canvassed about increased fire risk and possible health impacts from smoke from ignited synthetic surfaces.
Lamble, Paul., and Battam, Mick. (June 2020) Creating Sustainable Open Spaces - Using Compost to Deliver Liveability, Sustainability, Recreation and Economic Outcomes, Presentation at Ozwater2020, Adelaide, June 2020. Available from Australian Water Assocation website. Accessed 24 April 2021 https://awa.sharefile.com/share/view/s2a7b715b6804842a/foc40e5e-825c-469c-a165-d2d0264cb4b2 Keywords: Natural Turf, compost, water efficiency, drought resilience, circular economy, LCA This study highlights that sports fields with compost amended soils can lower water demand, increase soil fertility, increase drought resilience while providing a high wear grass surface for team sports. Through appropriate grass cultivar selection usage capacity can reach up to 37 to 40 hours per week of sports club use with minimal wear over the season. This is similar capacity for synthetic turf use. Use of compost for sporting fields also contributes to the circular economy of green waste collection, reducing landfill waste emissions from green waste. A well drained and constructed turf field can be a suitable alternative to synthetic pitches, especially as it avoids boosting the urban heat island effect, and provides for community informal active recreational needs. In terms of life-cycle cost a well built natural grass turf field using compost is estimated at one third to one quarter of the cost of a synthetic pitch, with a similar usage capacity and 2-3 times the carrying capacity of ordinary turf options. Note: this is based on extensive sporting field trials in Newcaste and the Hunter Valley. Results may be slightly different for Melbourne's climate or other locations. "Amending soil with compost increases the amount of organic matter in the soil profile. This improves the soil structure, increasing its resistance to compaction as well as increasing soil fertility by increasing the soil’s ability to retain nutrients. Fields with compacted soils will not only be harder under foot, but will have a lower water holding capacity. Furthermore, because compost keeps the soil structure open, it increases the ability of the soil to capture rainfall, meaning less water is required for irrigation. The soils of existing fields can be amended with compost by applying the compost to the surface and then mixing (incorporating) the compost throughout the soil profile with a blecavator. The turf surface is then re-established from existing material (if the turf variety is suitable) or a new turf surface is established using an appropriate turf cultivar for the expected usage at the site. "Compost amended fields also have superior water demand outcomes, with water savings of 10-20% compared to those with unamended soils... two sites, one with compost amended soils and the other without. In this case, the water savings from using compost were above 50%. "In addition to requiring less water during normal conditions, fields with compost amendment had superior drought resilience. ... The survival watering requirements of the compost amended field are approximately a quarter of those of the unamended site. This has significant implications for the amount of water that is required to sustain green spaces during drought and the volume of demand reductions that could be achieved during restrictions. "Not only does the compost amended field require less water to survive, but it also maintains vastly superior carrying capacity, particularly during water restrictions.... Furthermore, the compost amended field maintained its carrying capacity throughout Level 1 and Level 2 restrictions, with only a 5% reduction in capacity under Level 3. "By contrast, the carrying capacity of the unamended field falls by 20% under Level 1 restrictions, 40% under Level 2 and 60% under Level 3 (no irrigation).... Under severe water restrictions (no irrigation), the compost amended field can handle 3.5 times as much foot traffic as the unamended field. Hence, by amending sports field soils with compost, the water industry can significantly reduce the social and liveability impacts of drought in urban areas. "A well-built turf field where the soil has been amended with compost and established with a wear tolerant turf cultivar offers superior whole of life cost outcomes compared to lower capital cost alternatives (no compost, cheaper turf) or synthetic fields (Figure 4). When the carrying capacity of each surface is considered, the well built turf field is vastly superior at one third to one quarter of the cost (Figure 5). Furthermore, the well built turf field provides a carrying capacity similar to a synthethic field and up to 2-3 times the carrying capacity of alternative turf options. "From a liveability and heat island perspective, a well-built, natural turf field has lower surface temperatures than a synthetic field, with synthetic fields unusable when the BOM temperature exceed 30 degrees Celsius (Figure 6). This has significant implications for the functionality of synthetic turf surfaces during the warmer months. "Furthermore, well built turf surfaces provide flexibility for passive recreational and informal community use (e.g. dog walking) that is not possible with a synthetic surface. However, a synthetic surface may be more readily playable immediately following heavy rain during the winter months. That said, a well constructed turf field can be designed to drain rapidly, providing important surface water management measures are implemented (such as sufficient cross fall and avoiding infiltration risks from traditional turf sod)."
Law, Q.D., and Patton, A.J.. (2017). Biogeochemical cycling of carbon and nitrogen in cool‐season turfgrass systems. Urban Forestry and Urban Greening 26: 158– 162. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2017.06.001
Keywords: Natural turf, Carbon sequestration
No access to full article but study says if managed conservatively urban turf grass can act as a net carbon sink. No detail whether N2O emissions taken into account.
“All of the turfgrasses and management practices in this experiment resulted in a system-wide net C sink, though the magnitude of the sink varied by turfgrass selection and management strategy. In general, higher-yielding grasses and management practices increased soil C but also increased mowing requirements and thus emissions. Returning grass clippings was found to increase yield, soil and leaf tissue N, and soil C, but it also marginally increased mowing requirements. The results of this experiment support the assertion that managed turfgrass areas can act as a net C sink to help curb the increasing atmospheric GHG concentrations. The C sequestration potential of managed turfgrass is another of the numerous functional benefits of urban grasslands.”
Li, R. (2019). Tracking Microplastics from Artificial Football Fields to Stormwater Systems (Dissertation). Retrieved from http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-170290
https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A1330304&dswid=-2453
Keywords: Microplastics, synthetic turf, pollution
“Microplastics from artificial turfs have been recognized as the second most important source of microplastic emission in Sweden. Between 1640 to 2460 tons per year of microplastics are estimated to be lost from artificial turfs. The lost microplastics are potentially transported to stormwater wells by runoff during rainfall events, eventually reaching marine environments. This study aims to track microplastics from artificial turfs to stormwater wells.”
“Environmental risks associated with artificial turfs have been recognized in recent years. Wear and tear of the artificial turfs result in the loss of rubber infill. IVL estimated that artificial turfs in Sweden lose between 0.28 and 0.42 kg of rubber per m 2 per year on average, amounting to a total of 1640-2460 tons of infilled granulates lost per year, which has therefore become the second source of microplastics after tire wear (IVL, 2017). Loss of infilled granulates can be removed via people’s shoes and clothes, melting of snow cleared from the field, drainage, as well as through runoff.
Microplastics taken away by shoes and clothes may end up in the water treatment plants after washing the clothes. During snow melting, microplastics can spread outside the artificial turfs. In addition, microplastics lost from artificial turfs through the mentioned pathways are reaching stormwater, which is further reaching marine environments. However, it is uncertain how much of the lost microplastics are transported eventually by stormwater since data on microplastic content in stormwater are scarce.”
“Microplastics from artificial turfs, as the second source of microplastics in Sweden, have attracted much attention in recent years. Stormwater is considered as one of the most important pathways transporting microplastics to environment and in particular ecologically-sensitive surface water bodies. However, because of challenges in the quantitative analysis of microplastics in stormwater, how much microplastic from artificial turfs reaches the stormwater is still unknown.”
Loveday, Jane; Loveday, Grant; Byrne, Joshua J.; Ong, Boon-lay; Morrison, Gregory M. (2019), "Seasonal and Diurnal Surface Temperatures of Urban Landscape Elements" Sustainability 11, no. 19: 5280. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11195280
Keywords: Heat, UHIE, Synthetic turf, Natural turf, Australia, Perth.
A Perth based study on the urban heat island effect of various surfaces including turfgrass and synthetic turf. The study correctly notes that the urban heat island effect is most prominent as a night time impact, although it also is seen during the daytime. Quite an interesting study that highlights UHIE also manifests not only during summer, but also Spring and Autumn in Perth. This is important for Melbourne as Perth average temperatures give a glimpse of our future. The study also looks at the change in evening temperatures. This is where artificial turf will cool through convection of the heat to the atmosphere thus keeping the ambient air temperature high. This accentuates the night time impact of the urban heat island effect. This will especially impact local residents around a synthetic field. Some interesting graphical representations of the comparative data.
Phase 1 discussion: “Despite similarity in colour however, the differences in thermal behaviour were notable for the artificial turf grass and the natural turf grass. Artificial turf grass was on average 11.2 ◦ C hotter than turf grass in summer over the measurement period. Evapotranspiration is assumed to be the main cause of this difference, as well as the perviousness of the natural turf grass allowing any moisture from the soil to evaporate up though the surface, providing extra cooling. The artificial turf grass, consisting of a tightly woven plastic mat, does not allow significant moisture through from the soil and is thus likely to preclude any evaporative cooling.”
For phase 2 the study comments on artificial turf: Despite being a low thermal mass product, artificial grass also only goes below ambient between 20:30 and 21:00, indicating its close ground coupling is increasing its thermal mass dramatically.”
“The ∆T av [average change in temperature] ranking is relevant for overall urban heat as it quantifies how much heat is convected into the atmosphere from each LE (landscape element). The daytime ranking is important for landscapes where daytime use is prevalent, whilst the evening ranking is important for when people are trying to cool their homes in the evening. Previous literature on separating the data into these specific categories has not been found, but this method may be useful for understanding temporal UHI variations.”
Lundstrom, Marjie., and Wolfe, Eli., (December 19, 2019), Fields of Waste: Artificial Turf, Touted as Recycling Fix for Millions of Scrap Tires, Becomes Mounting Disposal Mess, Fair Warning, USA https://www.fairwarning.org/2019/12/fields-of-waste-artificial-turf-mess/
Keywords: Waste, synthetic turf, pollution, infill, Grey literature
Marjie Lundstrom and Eli Wolfe did an investigative journalism article published at Fair Warning highlighting the lack of any recycling of synthetic turf in North America and the growing problem of used synthetic grass as landfill along with associated rubber infill.
Mack CD, Hershman EB, Anderson RB, Coughlin MJ, McNitt AS, Sendor RR, Kent RW. (2019) Higher Rates of Lower Extremity Injury on Synthetic Turf Compared With Natural Turf Among National Football League Athletes: Epidemiologic Confirmation of a Biomechanical Hypothesis. Am J Sports Med. 2019 Jan;47(1):189-196. doi: 10.1177/0363546518808499. Epub 2018 Nov 19. PMID: 30452873. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0363546518808499
Keywords: Health, Synthetic turf, Natural turf, Injuries
It is clear from this study that synthetic turf produces more sports injuries associated with lower extremities than on grass fields. The researchers attempted to eliminate other factors by relying on 5 years of data from the USA National Football league. The study concluded that “These results support the biomechanical mechanism hypothesized and add confidence to the conclusion that synthetic turf surfaces have a causal impact on lower extremity injury.”
Background: Biomechanical studies have shown that synthetic turf surfaces do not release cleats as readily as natural turf, and it has been hypothesized that concomitant increased loading on the foot contributes to the incidence of lower body injuries.
This study evaluates this hypothesis from an epidemiologic perspective, examining whether the lower extremity injury rate in National Football League (NFL) games is greater on contemporary synthetic turfs as compared with natural surfaces.
Hypothesis: Incidence of lower body injury is higher on synthetic turf than on natural turf among elite NFL athletes playing on modern-generation surfaces.
Results: Play on synthetic turf resulted in a 16% increase in lower extremity injuries per play than that on natural turf (IRR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.10-1.23). This association between synthetic turf and injury remained when injuries were restricted to those that resulted in ≥8 days missed, as well as when categorizations were narrowed to focus on distal injuries anatomically closer to the playing surface (knee, ankle/foot). The higher rate of injury on synthetic turf was notably stronger when injuries were restricted to noncontact/surface contact injuries (IRRs, 1.20-2.03; all statistically significant).
Madden, A.L., Arora, V., Holmes, K.A., Pfautsch, S. (2018) Cool Schools. Western Sydney University. 56 p.
http://doi.org/10.26183/5b91d72db0cb7
Keywords: Heat, UHIE, Australia, Environmental Context, schools
Important research from the University of Western Sydney on the impact of heat on schools. It includes Mean temperatures (°C) of surface materials used in outdoor play spaces, including synthetic surfaces.
“Outdoor play spaces – as well as urban parks and playgrounds - are important spaces for urban sustainability, social connection, physical activity, and general community well-being (Boldemann et al., 2006; Vanos et al., 2016). Well-designed play spaces provide comfortable and safe areas for children to engage in activities for improved health and well-being (Vanos, 2015) and also contribute to microscale cooling, providing heat refuges in high seasonal temperatures. Conversely, improperly designed, outdoor play spaces can contribute to micro urban heat island effects (see, for example, Moogk-Soulis, 2010), and become intolerably hot and unsafe for children.”
Magnusson, Simon., and Macsik, Josef., (14 April 2017) “Analysis of energy use and emissions of greenhouse gases, metals and organic substances from construction materials used for artificial turf”, Resources, Conservation and Recycling. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2017.03.007
Keywords: LCA, energy, Greenhouse gas emissions, Synthetic turf
This provides a total life-cycle assessment for an artificial turf sports field in Sweden. It appears to be more rigorous than Meil and Bushi (2006).
This study concluded total energy use was 5.9GJ and the GHG emissions was 527 ton CO2 equivalents. The authors point out that these totals can vary with a factor of 1.5 and 2.2 respectively depending upon the infill type chosen, and method of disposal whether incineration or landfill (both are problematic for a closed loop circular economy which Moreland is aiming for)
It is clear in both studies that Synthetic turf loads both energy and emissions at the start and end of the total emissions life cycle: in the initial manufacture and processing, and in the end of life disposal.
The study also raised some concern over leachates: “Substances which are known to be harmful for the aquatic environment and/or humans was detected in all infill leachates. Eight harmful substances were detected from RT with a total of 46 g/l in the leachate….The results show that all infills tested produced leachates containing substances harmful to aquatic life. For the leachates from TPE, EPDM and R-EPDM, information about potential toxicity could not be found for a large share of the total S-VOCs identified and seems to be missing.”
Mah, Alice., (Feb 2021) Future-Proofing Capitalism: The Paradox of the Circular Economy for Plastics. Global Environmental Politics 2021; doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/glep_a_00594
Keywords: Microplastics, environmental context, circular economy
This is quite a powerful discussion of the plastics and petrochemical industry. While synthetic turf is not mentioned, it is an important growth product from the plastics and petrochemical companies. These companies seek to pivot their business models to encompass the ‘circular economy’ and ‘sustainability’ criteria. Alice Mah is a Professor of Sociology at Warwick University and her critique is highly insightful. “Reducing plastics needs to be seen as part of the necessary green transition away from fossil fuels, as opposed to expanding plastics as a hedge against it.” she argues. The first paragraph of her Study Conclusions:
“The circular economy for plastics is both a corporate battleground for containing environmental crises and a catalyst for intensifying expansion. Faced with industry-level threats to public legitimacy and future markets, corporations across the petrochemical value chain have banded together to contain the circular economy policy agenda, appearing to be sustainable while proliferating unsustainable markets. Corporations have achieved this through deploying their advantage in technological expertise and understandings of complexity. The industry attempts to future-proof capitalism from the shocks of green transition by designing and controlling the new systems. Yet within intensifying wars of position over global environmental issues, the battleground is never stable. While industry has become more sophisticated at dealing with complexity, it has also exposed its vulnerability to systemic threats through the speed and extent of its response. There has been mounting pressure for industrial transformation of plastics, including climate divestment, plastic-free, environmental justice, and zero-waste campaigns, coming not only from grassroots movements but also from regulators and investors.”
Massey, Rachel., Pollard, Lindsey., Jacobs, Molly., Onasch, Joy., Harari, Homero. (Feb 2020) Artificial Turf Infill: A Comparative Assessment of Chemical Contents, NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy 2020, Vol. 30(1) 10–26 DOI: 10.1177/1048291120906206 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1048291120906206
Keywords: Infill, Synthetic turf, hazard assessment, toxicity
A comparative hazard assessment of alternative infill products and their chemicals. This study comes from the Toxics Use Reduction Institute, University of Massachusetts Lowell, MA, USA. The hazard reviews included: tyre crumb (incumbent), ethylene propylene diene terpolymer EPDM rubber (Alternative), thermoplastic elastomer TPE (Alternative), Waste Shoe Material Infill (Alternative), Acrylic-Coated Sand Infill (Alternative), Plant- or Mineral-Based Infills (Alternative). Moreland Council have indicated a preference for ‘organic infill’ for any synthetic turf pitch. This study concludes that “Plant-based materials are likely to contain the fewest toxic chemicals of concern, provided that they are not chemically treated, but could pose hazards related to respiratory fibers, molds, and/or exposure to allergens. If concerns about allergens, dust, and mold growth can be addressed, then these materials may be a safer choice from an environmental health and safety perspective.”
The authors stress that “Regardless of infill type, artificial turf poses other health and environmental concerns, including chemicals in artificial grass blades, dispersion of synthetic polymer particles in the environment, loss of habitat, and excess heat.3 TURI has identified organically managed natural grass as a safer alternative and has worked with a number of communities to document their experiences with natural grass playing fields.”
“This article presents a chemical hazard-based comparison of materials conducted by the Massachusetts Toxics Use Reduction Institute (TURI), taking into account the results of similar assessments by two other government entities, the Norwegian Environmental Agency, and the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) in the Netherlands.3,4,12 We present this comparison in the context of methods developed for alternatives assessment, with modifications to account for the need to compare materials containing multiple chemicals. Our findings about individual infill materials are presented with the goal of supporting institutions and communities in making well-informed decisions about these materials.”
“ It is important to note that the information presented here only considers chemicals and that infills may also vary in other important ways, including amount of respirable dust generated, effect on injury rates, or other factors.”
“The alternative materials all either contained smaller numbers of chemicals of concern or lower levels of certain chemicals compared with tire crumb. However, many of these materials do contain some chemicals of concern, and in some limited cases, levels of certain individual chemicals were higher in the alternatives than in the tire crumb (Table 1). It is important to recognize that materials may not be homogeneous, so tests from one batch of infill may not be fully applicable to another.”
As Moreland Council have said they are likely to use an ‘organic’ infill material, here is what the study said:
“Sand. Sand is frequently mixed with plant-, mineral-, or synthetic polymer-based infills. If sand is used, the size and source of the sand particles can affect safety. Silica, the principal constituent of sand, is a carcinogen if inhaled in the form of crystalline silica dust. Industrial sand that is freshly fractured or that has been highly processed to contain very small particles can be a respiratory hazard when inhaled. Thus, it is important to understanding the source and type of any sand used in a recreational setting.”
“Plant-based materials. Possible hazards of plant-based infill materials could include exposure to respirable dust and fibers, as well as allergic reactions or sensitization. For example, respiratory disease has been documented in cork workers exposed to cork dust.87 Fungi that frequently colonize cork appear to play some role in the disease, although the disease is not fully understood.88 Nut shells can pose concerns related to allergies if nut allergens are present on the shells.89,90 A variety of respirable plant-based fibers can cause disease and disability. For example, cotton dust is a well-known source of respiratory disease.91 We did not identify any studies that consider possible hazards related to plant-based fibers in infill.”
“Vendor test data. We reviewed test data provided by one vendor for several plant-based products. In general, levels of lead were below the detection limit and levels of zinc and other metals were lower than those for synthetic infills. Information was not provided on any antimicrobial treatments or other organic chemicals that could be present. From an environmental perspective, plant- or mineral-based infills do not contribute to plastic or rubber pollution in the environment. Provided that they are not coated or otherwise treated with synthetic chemicals, they can be expected to be free of many of the toxic chemicals that have been measured in synthetic infills. In summary, certain plant- or mineral-based infills may be a safer alternative to tire crumb from a chemical perspective, while others, such as those containing zeolite, pose hazards. However, there are unknowns about respiratory exposure to dust generated by some of these materials, among other possible hazards.”
McNitt, A.S., D.M. Petrunak and T.J. Serensits. (2008). Temperature amelioration of synthetic turf surfaces through irrigation. Acta Hort. 783:573-582.
https://plantscience.psu.edu/research/centers/ssrc/documents/temperature-irrigation.pdf
Keywords: Synthetic Turf, heat, irrigation, water
A study from Pennsylvania State University on the heat retention of synthetic turf. Outlines 4 experiments and concludes that synthetic turf was found to have substantially higher surface temperatures than natural turfgrass. Suggests there are benefits in cooling synthetic surfaces with irrigation to reduce heat retention when needed, although that comes with the cost of installing irrigation. Comment: this would reduce the water savings benefit of synthetic turf that is often used as a justification.
“Reports indicate the surface temperatures of traditional synthetic turf can
as much as 35-60 °C higher than natural turfgrass surface temperatures. Surface
temperatures of infill synthetic turf systems have been reported to be as high as
93°C on a day when air temperatures were 37°C. Researchers have concluded that
the heat transfer from the surface to the sole of an athlete's foot is significant
enough to contribute to greater physiological stress that may result in serious heat
related health problems.”
Meil, J., and L. Bushi, “Estimating the required global warming offsets to achieve a carbon neutral synthetic field Turf system installation: Athena Institute.” (2006). http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.562.9393
Keywords: LCA, Greenhouse gas emissions, carbon sequestration, Synthetic turf, natural turf.
An early attempt in Canada to do total life-cycle assessment of synthetic and natural turf sporting field. The results show a substantial difference in Greenhouse Gas emissions between natural turf and synthetic turf. The study assumes synthetic surface would be recycled and evidence points to a total lack of recycling in North America. This would potentially double the emissions from 55 to over 100 tonnes CO2e in a ten year period. The study put forward that natural grass, depending on maintenance regime could potentially operate as a carbon sink sequestering 17 tonnes CO2e per 10 years. Subsequent research by others highlight that carbon sequestration would likely be minimal, if at all, on athletic and sporting fields.
Monash Climate change Communication Research Hub, (March 2021) Temperature check: Greening Australia's warming cities. Australian Conservation Foundation. Available from the Analysis and Policy Observatory https://apo.org.au/node/311336
Keywords: Grey Literature, Environmental context, heat, UHIE, Australia, Melbourne.
Review of the temperature and heatwave trend for Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane and the rising impact of the urban heat island effect on liveability. A general article on rising urban heat and implications for urban living. Does not mention the role of synthetic surfaces that add to urban heat, but advises that putting in place green infrastructure to address growing urban heat takes time, early action is essential. Extreme and average maximum temperatures are projected to increase, the number of days over 35C will increase. This will reduce useability of synthetic surfaces unless water is used for temporary cooling, which then reduces the justification for synthetic turf providing a water saving.
Moore, G.M., Urban Trees: Worth More Than They Cost (2009), Burnley College, University of Melbourne. https://202020vision.com.au/media/1021/moore-urbantreesworthmorethantheycost.pdf
Keywords: Natural turf, carbon sequestration, water, irrigation, synthetic turf, Australia, Melbourne.
The main focus of this article is on trees as Green infrastructure, and relates directly to the Melbourne environment and climate context. It particularly highlights the issues of watering vegetation during drought, and applies this to the dilemma over maintaining sports fields and the push for conversion to synthetic turf to save water. Note that after the millennial drought Councils started putting in much more stormwater harvesting and storage systems to provide irrigation opportunities for parks, trees and sporting ovals to help manage them through drought conditions.
“Despite the current, popular view that turf and lawns are profligate water users and are unsustainable in the Australian environment, natural turf is usually a more sustainable option than sealed surfaces or artificial turf if you consider the latter’s fossil fuel chemical base and imbedded energy. Turf is quite a complex ecosystem that has a significant effect on temperature and the heat island effect, and if properly managed also sequesters a considerable amount of carbon. Perhaps it is not the villain that many think it is when they consider only the water component of a more complex equation.
“Consider the following scenario. In a small backyard the lawn (8 x 4m) has been replaced with artificial turf at a cost of $6000. The owner has done so because they have heard that lawn is not good for water use or the environment. The artificial turf is made from fossil fuel, imported from overseas and has high embedded energy. The purchase and installation of a locally made 5000L tank would cost $1200 and provide enough water for such a small lawn year round. Already the owner misses the birds that used to come fossicking in the lawn. Her local council is also replacing a turf oval, which they cannot irrigate due to local water authority restrictions, with artificial turf. They are doing so as part of their water policy. However, the product is imported with high embedded energy and carbon, and the council is not harvesting the water that runs off or passes through the new artificial turf surface. Efficient irrigation and water recycling and a water efficient native grass would be a far more sustainable option for a low use oval. The council has also used couch grass on many of its other sporting ovals, unaware that its high binding strength could cause serious knee injuries to teenage football, hockey or cricket players.
“Trees and urban landscapes are assets in every sense of the word and resources for allocated for their proper and sustained management. Amongst these resources may be the need for an allocation of water, used wisely and sustainably. If the focus is solely on water such that trees and other vegetation are left to die, then consequently the carbon that they sequester would be released into the atmosphere.”
Moreland Council, (April 2018), Sports Surface Needs Analysis (D18/102018), Moreland Council Agenda 11 April 2018 https://www.moreland.vic.gov.au/globalassets/key-docs/meeting/agenda-council-upc/council-agenda-11-april-2018.doc (Doc 161MB)
An excerpt of Sports Surface Needs Analysis (D18/102018) is also available here: https://fawkner.org/2018-04-11-sports-surface-needs-analysis/
Keywords: Grey Literature, Synthetic turf, Sports, UHIE, policy, Moreland.
This is the Council Officers report and a consultants report that details the program for roll out of synthetic and hybrid surfaces in Moreland Municipality. It includes Hybrid and Synthetic Sports Surfaces Needs Analysis prepared by Smart Connection consultancy dated February 2018. It recommended 9 sports fields be converted to hybrid or synthetic fields in Moreland, subject to funding and budgetary considerations. The consultants report failed to adequately take into account Greenhouse gas emissions (total life cycle assessment), impact on biodiversity, and heavily prioritised organised sport above active informal recreational activity and environmental impacts, and offered limited measures to ameliorate the extra urban heat of these fields.
As part of a triple bottom line decision making it was greatly skewed to social (sports club) outcomes, and largely ignoring informal active recreation, above the economic and environmental impacts and factors.
Executive summary and recommendation fails to mention Hosken Reserve north, though it is mentioned in the full detail section. This is highly misleading for anyone reading the executive summary of what work was being proposed (whether already agreed to in some form or not).
Section 7.5 on Heat stress is a major issue for synthetic turf limiting the playability. ‘Cool Grass’ versions will only marginally address this issue.
Section 8 deals with sustainability considerations.
8.3.4 says “It is thought that the carbon footprint for natural grass is lower than that of an artificial surface. This is when you compare the installation and Maintenance of grass (eg fertiliser production, mowing and maintenance) with the synthetic surface option and what’s involved in its production, transportation and disposal of materials.” In the next section - 8.3.5 Carbon offset it detailed the 2006 Canadian study of CO2e emissions of 55.6 tonnes for a synthetic field but failed to mention likely soil organic carbon sequestration of 19 tonnes. It failed to mention Magnusson and Macsik (April 2017) which provides a Greenhouse Gas emissions total life-cycle assessment of a synthetic field for 10 years as 527 ton CO2e. (Note the 2017 Eunomia report commissioned by FIFA contained life-cycle emissions estimate of 200kg CO2e per square metre = 1500 tonnes for a standard FIFA pitch (Eunomia Research & Consulting Ltd for FIFA, (March 2017), Environmental Impact Study on Artificial Football Turf))
It also used a Californian study (Townsend-Small and Czimczik, 2010) to say that natural turf grass is unlikely to be a net sequester of GHG emissions, There was an update to this study, not denoted as a reference, to suggest that under some circumstances urban grasslands/lawns may be net carbon sinks. A more recent study highlighted it used a very high rate of fertiliser which likely also skewed the results.(Zhang et al, 2013)
It also used a petrochemical industry study (BASF corporation) which nominally compared synthetic to natural grass and “found that the average life cycle over 20 years of natural grass fields are 15 per cent higher than the synthetic alternatives.” This study was not an independent total life cycle assessment study and the results and conclusions must be questioned as to bias given its origin from a major Chemical company, especially as it is not peer reviewed academically.
Section 8.3.2 dealt with The Urban Heat Island Effect, but does not address local area impacts or prioritise this impact in assessing synthetic turf for local residents in a warming climate with more extreme heat days.
Section 8.5.2 Green engineering - conversion to synthetic turf would seem to go against this being Green Engineering. See VCCCAR (2013) report.
The Sports Surface Needs Analysis consultants report does not mention Environmental impacts on soil biota, grass seeds and insects which will likely have a trophic impact on local urban birdlife. This is a cumulative impact in highly urbanised environments. Research has been very limited, but there is at least one recent study identifying this issue.
There is little mention of emissions and energy and micro-plastics pollution with disposal of synthetic turf. This is essential to include when assessing decisions to install hybrid or synthetic turf. While synthetic turf distributors market their products as ‘recycleable’, there is no tertiary recycling of any synthetic turf done in Australia (or the USA where the market is even larger) due to the high expense in separating the plastic turf from infill into separate streams, which even then only produces a poor quality plastic resin. There is a very small market in secondary use. All synthetic turf in Australia ends up as landfill.
Science has progressed even in the 3 years since this consultants report which should necessitate a reappraisal of environmental impacts, including Total life-cycle assessments analysis, and reconsideration of the triple bottom line priorities, taking into account in particular more recent Council policies on waste and circular economy, climate emergency and zero carbon framework and targets.
Moreland Council, (10 April 2019) Plastic Wise Policy
https://www.moreland.vic.gov.au/environment-bins/environment/plastic-wise-moreland/plastic-wise-sports-clubs/
Keywords: Grey Literature, Environmental context, microplastics, pollution, policy, Australia, Moreland.
This policy identifies that Moreland Council is taking action in limiting single use plastic at all Council sponsored or organised events. It highlights leadership on reducing plastic use and provides a sharp contrast to the Sport and Recreation Department drive to convert natural grass sporting fields to synthetic surfaces. Council actively applies the Plastic Wise policy to sporting clubs.
Moreland Council, Zero Carbon Moreland 2040 Framework https://www.moreland.vic.gov.au/globalassets/key-docs/policy-strategy-plan/moreland-zero-carbon-2040-framework.doc
See also ZERO CARBON MORELAND – Climate Emergency Action Plan 2020/21 – 2024/25 (November 2019) https://www.moreland.vic.gov.au/globalassets/key-docs/policy-strategy-plan/zero-carbon-moreland-climate-emergency-action-plan-2020-21-2024-25.pdf
Keywords: Grey Literature, Greenhouse gas emissions, carbon sequestration, Environmental context, policy, Moreland.
These are Moreland Council’s principal climate action policy and first five year plan, incorporating a community net zero by 2040 emissions reduction target. The Zero Carbon Moreland 2040 Framework refers to several challenges in managing scarce infrastructure resources, including “Preserving, creating and enhancing green open spaces as the city population grows” . Clearly this will be a challenge taking into account formal community and professional sporting organisations growing need for using green spaces, and informal recreational activities that also use these spaces with a growing need due to increasing urban consolidation and densification highlighting their environmental importance and the environmental services they deliver.
The 2040 vision also includes Moreland being a circular economy with zero waste. (See Moreland Waste and Litter Strategy that incorporated a zero waste to landfill target by 2030) Yet while synthetic turf products, including synthetic grass, are marketed as “recycleable”, like many plastics they are not recycled but instead disposed of mostly to landfill due to the exorbitant costs and energy in setting up a recycling stream process.
Under the Climate Emergency Action Plan 2020/21 - 2024/25 Council has a responsibility under section 4.6 to “Act to reduce Council’s operational waste and the ecological footprint of Council’s facilities and services.” This includes sporting fields and use of synthetic pitches.
Moreland Council, Waste and Litter Strategy (2018) https://www.moreland.vic.gov.au/globalassets/key-docs/policy-strategy-plan/waste-and-litter-strategy-2018---2022---version-for-web-pdf.pdf
Keywords: Grey Literature, Waste, landfill, synthetic turf, policy, Australia, Moreland.
In May 2018 Moreland Council voted 9/2 for NOM15/18 - Zero Waste to Landfill by 2030 (D18/151809) which "Seeks to refocus the new Waste and Litter Strategy with a goal of zero waste to landfill across the municipality by 2030. The strategy as a minimum shall:
a) Establish a 2030 Zero Waste to Landfill framework.
b) Seek to embed and give weight to the '5R's - Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Repurpose, Recycle' as core values in all future contracts and procurement"
This became part of the Moreland Council Waste and Litter Strategy 2018 (PDF) as adopted at 12 December 2018 Council meeting.
Use of synthetic surface and it’s disposal seems to be greatly at odds with Moreland Council commitment to zero waste to landfill by 2030, and commitment to a circular economy. These zero waste and circular economy principles are also embedded within the Zero Carbon Moreland 2040 Framework.
Moreland Council, (2016) Moreland Urban Heat Island Effect Action Plan 2016/2017 – 2025/2026. https://www.moreland.vic.gov.au/globalassets/areas/esd/esd-uhie-urban-heat-island-effect---action-plan---final-draft-for-council-june-2016.pdf
Keywords: Grey literature, UHIE, heat, Policy, Moreland, Australia.
Moreland Council’s Urban Heat Island Effect Action Plan 2016/2017 – 2025/2026 which showed measures Moreland Council is taking to reduce urban heat Island effect on residents. Comment: The Sports Surface Needs Analysis (2018) failed to reference this strategic document. Urban heat was relegated to a dot point in the detail of the report, never adequately considered in the executive summary or Council Officers Report.
Moreland Council, (November 2019) Sport and Active Recreation Strategy, https://www.activemoreland.com.au/globalassets/website-active-moreland/documents/recreation/mor002-rec-strategy-v5.pdf
Keywords: Grey Literature, Sports, Policy, Moreland, Australia
The Sport and Active Recreation Strategy (2019) fails to mention the Urban Heat Island Effect, or the Urban Heat Island Action Plan (2016) even once. Nor is any climate change lens applied for this strategic plan as part of the Council Climate Emergency Framework.
Climate change is already having a huge impact on sport. See the Climate Council (February 2021) report: Game, Set, Match: Calling Time on Climate Inaction, or Sports Environment Alliance (SEA) 2020 report: Future Proofing Community Sport & Recreation Facilities – A Roadmap for Climate Change Management for the Sport and Recreation Facilities Sector.
The Sport and Active Recreation Strategy totally ignores climate impacts or any strategic planning around climate impacts on active recreation and organised sports and community sporting facilities in Moreland.
This highlights that Sport and Recreation within Council appears to be operating in a very tightly siloed approach out of touch with Moreland Council’s climate emergency policy framework. This has implications for community trust on decision making on Hosken Reserve future.
PBS Frontline production, (August 2020), Plastic Wars. As presented by Craig Reucassel for Four Corners on ABC TV. https://www.abc.net.au/4corners/plastic-wars:-recycling-spin-in-the-plastics/12529956
Keywords: Grey Literature, Plastics, microplastics, Environmental context, pollution
While synthetic turf products, including synthetic grass, are marketed as “recycleable”, like many plastics they are not recycled but instead disposed of mostly to landfill due to the exorbitant costs and energy in setting up a recycling stream process. This documentary production investigates the hype and marketing spin behind plastics and its marketing as products that are recycled. Nothing seems different with synthetic turf...
“Industry insiders expose the cynicism at the heart of the strategy.
“There was never an enthusiastic belief that recycling was ultimately going to work in a significant way.” Former plastics industry executive
“The program shows how tactics brought in decades ago are still fooling consumers.
“At the bottom of all these plastic containers is this little chasing arrow—the little recycling symbol with a number…there are no curbside programs that would accept any of these tubs.” Environmental scientist”
Pennsylvania State University Center for Sports Surface Research, (2012) Synthetic Turf Heat Evaluation-Progress Report. https://plantscience.psu.edu/research/centers/ssrc/documents/heat-progress-report.pdf
Keywords: Synthetic turf, Heat
Experiment on heat retention of various different coloured synthetic fibres and infills (including Black Rubber, Ecofill and TPE). Results summary:
“No product in this test substantially reduced surface temperature compared to the traditional
system of green fibers filled with black rubber in both the indoor and outdoor test. Reductions of
five or even ten degrees offer little advantage when temperatures still exceed 150° F. Until
temperatures can be reduced by at least twenty or thirty degrees for an extended period of time,
surface temperature will remain a major issue on synthetic turf fields.”
Petrovic, A.M. & Easton, Z.M. (2005) The role of turfgrass management in the water quality of urban environments Intl. Turfgrass Soc. Res. J. 10 55 69
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/A-Petrovic-2/publication/267817326_The_Role_of_Turfgrass_Management_in_the_Water_Quality_of_Urban_Environment/links/5460af5f0cf27487b451dfad/The-Role-of-Turfgrass-Management-in-the-Water-Quality-of-Urban-Environment.pdf
Keywords: Natural grass, pollution, fertiliser, water, irrigation
This study looks at the role of urban turfgrass in contributing to urban pollution by the use of fertilisers and pesticides. It particularly considers Nitrogen and Phosphorus contribution to pollution of urban water ways. It provides arguments that conservatively managed natural turf grass does not substantially contribute to Nitrogen and Phosphorus pollution of waterways.
“Application of fertilizers and pesticides to turfgrass is a common practice to maintain the desired aesthetic, recreational and functional characteristics. Thus, there is a potential for negative impacts of turfgrass management practices on water quality. However, turfgrass as a land use has a positive impact on urban runoff water quality and hydrology.”
“Under correct management practices and relatively controlled situations discussed above for both N and P, it appears that turfgrass has a generally low potential to pollute water bodies.”
The study warns that “Overall pesticide loss from turfgrass ecosystems is limited. However, the first 24 hours after application present the greatest time for off site movement. Thus, extreme care must be used on sites near water bodies or on sites on highly pervious soils where application timing must be avoided when heavy rainfall is predicted.”
“Water in urban/suburban areas has higher concentrations of total P with more than 70 percent of sampled urban streams exceeding the USEPA desired goal for preventing nuisance plant growth.
“Small-scale research results confirm turfgrass has a lower potential impact on groundwater N levels than other land uses.
“Elevated P levels observed in urban/suburban surface water in the USA may be associated with other landscape uses and storm water management practices. In comparative studies, high-density turfgrass often has the lowest amount of runoff and least amount of P loading
of surface water.”
The study ends with summarising the many positive features of turfgrass:
“As developed areas continue to grow, turfgrass acreage will continue to grow as well. The functional, recreational, and aesthetic benefits provided by turfgrass are unmatched by other crops. Turfgrass provides sediment reduction, runoff control (Linde and Watschke, 1997), flood control, reduction in point and non-point source pollution, water filtration, heat dissipation, oxygen production (Beard and Green, 1994), N storage (Groffman et al., 2004), and carbon sequestration (Qian and Follett, 2002).”
Pfautsch, S., Tjoelker, A R. (Oct 2020) The impact of surface cover and tree canopy
on air temperature in Western Sydney. Western Sydney University, 140 p. https://doi.org/10.26183/bk6d-1466
Keywords: heat, UHIE, Australia, Environmental context,
Sebastion Pfautsch and his team have been doing a lot of research on addressing extreme heat, and the urban heat island effect in Western Sydney including a number of reports to Western Sydney Councils.
“This research shows:
» Increasing the area of hard surfaces and buildings leads to warming
» Increasing the area of open spaces and tree canopy leads to cooling
» When provided in equal proportions warming from hard surfaces exceeds cooling from open space
» The largest cooling benefits are generated by open space
» Increasing tree canopy cover has no effect on peak heatwave conditions, yet plays a significant role in cooling nighttime air temperatures
» The magnitude of attainable cooling effects in urban space is 0.8-1.3°C for mean summer air temperatures
» The capacity to lower peak heatwave air temperatures is very limited
» Open space and tree canopy cover can markedly reduce summer nighttime air temperatures”
Pfautsch S., Rouillard S., Wujeska-K l ause A., Bae A., Vu L., Manea A., Tabassum S.,
Staas, L., Ossola A., Holmes, K. and Leishman M. (Sept 2020) School Microclimates.
Western Sydney University, 56 p.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.26183/np86-t866
Keywords: heat, UHIE, Australia, Environmental context, schools
This is important research on urban heat within a school in the Western suburbs of Sydney that includes two large areas of artificial surfaces. It examines how to improve outcomes to limit heat health impact on users of the school. Heat influences learning outcomes and also represents a serious health risk. It includes examination of the potential burn hazard from hot surface materials.
“Assessment of surface temperature of different materials in full sunshine revealed that artificial grass and bare soil were the hottest surfaces, regardless of ambient temperatures (Table 8). Sunlit artificial grass reached a mean temperature of 52°C during the normal summer day despite the air temperature being below 30°C. The surface temperature of artificial grass increased when ambient air temperatures rose and a maximum value of close to 70°C was measured for this material.” says the report.
One of the recommendations of the report is that “Use of artificial grass should be avoided or restricted to areas with zero exposure to direct sunshine.”
Poeplau, C., Marstorp, H., Thored, K., Kätterer, T., (2016) Effect of grassland cutting frequency on soil carbon storage – a case study on public lawns in three Swedish cities
Soil, 2 (2016), pp. 175-184 https://soil.copernicus.org/articles/2/175/2016/
Keywords: Carbon Sequestration, Natural turf
This study found that frequently cut urban lawns were found to contain 55% more soil C than surrounding arable soils.
“The higher aboveground NPP in the utility lawns had a significant positive effect on soil carbon. This was expected, since the clippings were not removed and were thus able to contribute directly to soil organic matter formation.”
“Overall, our findings and those of previous studies (Christopher and Lal, 2007; Poeplau et al., 2015a) confirm that plant input driven by NPP is the major driver for SOC dynamics. Root carbon input is recognised as being of major importance for building up soil organic matter, since a higher fraction of root-derived carbon is stabilised in the soil than in aboveground plant material (Kätterer et al., 2011). In temperate grasslands, up to 70 % of the total NPP is allocated to roots and their exudates (Bolinder et al., 2007).”
“in the present study we were able to show that SOC storage in urban lawns can be increased
at comparatively low cost under temperate climate conditions by optimising NPP and leaving residues on the lawn….However, for a full greenhouse gas budget, the effects of lawn management on other trace gases, primarily nitrous oxide (N2O), have to be considered (Townsend-Small and Czimczik, 2010). In that case, management of the clippings will most likely play a key role, since coverage of the soil with organic material increases soil moisture and the availability of labile carbon but decreases soil oxygen, all of which favour N2O formation (Larsson et al., 1998; Petersen et al., 2011).”
Power, Julie, (14 March 2021), Fake grass may be greener, but much hotter and less friendly to environment, Sydney Morning Herald. Accessed 14 March 2021. https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/fake-grass-may-be-greener-but-much-hotter-and-less-friendly-to-environment-20210312-p57a95.html
Keywords: Grey literature, Environmental context, UHIE, microplastics, pollution, synthetic turf
News article about community campaigns in Sydney highlighting urban heat and micro-plastics pollution problem of the growing trend for state government funding Councils to install synthetic turf sporting fields. NSW Planning Minister Rob Stokes has asked his department to investigate sustainable alternatives to synthetic grass.
“New research by the Australian Microplastic Assessment Project (AUSMAP) with Northern Beaches Council, funded by NSW’s Environment Protection Authority, has found 80 per cent of the waste entering stormwater drains was black crumb (recycled tyres used for the base of these fields) and microplastics from astroturf – compared to 5 per cent in areas without these playing fields.
“USMAP director of research Dr Scott Wilson said they were “definitely finding a proliferation of the crumb and some grass” particularly when many games had been played and after wet or windy weather.”
On urban heat impact it quoted a researcher:
“On a hot day, temperatures on synthetic grass can be more than twice as high as on a grass playing field. Sebastian Pfautsch from Western Sydney University found temperatures on a synthetic play area reached 106 degrees in western Sydney during a heatwave in January 2020.
“I absolutely loathe synthetic grass,” Dr Pfautsch, who specialises on the impact of rising temperatures in urban environments, said. “It is possibly the worst materials for heat and it is made from completely unsustainable, non-recyclable plastic that goes straight to landfill.”
Pronk, M., Woutersen, M. & Herremans, J., (2020) Synthetic turf pitches with rubber granulate infill: are there health risks for people playing sports on such pitches?. J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol 30, 567–584 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41370-018-0106-1
Keywords: health, toxicity, synthetic turf, infill, Sports.
Most health studies have found that sports player exposure to heavy metals and chemicals from infill poses little risk, with this risk being further ameliorated if organic infills are used such as coconut husks, cork or crushed walnut shells. For example, this 2018 Dutch study assessing cancer risk concluded:
“on the current evidence available, it is considered safe to play sports on STP with the rubber infill in place in the Netherlands. No immediate action was thus required. It was recommended though to review the conclusions when the results of the ongoing, large-scale studies in the US become available. Further, it was recognised that, should the rubber granulate have contained concentrations of PAHs as high as the European concentration limits for mixtures, safe use might not be guaranteed. To ensure therefore the supply of rubber granulate with only very low concentrations of hazardous substances (PAHs in particular) and thus the safety for people playing sports, it was recommended to set regulatory limit values specifically for (substances in) rubber granulate.”
This study was conducted in 2 months and for that reason targeted specific groups of players on the synthetic turf: Field player aged 4–11 years (recreational), Goalkeeper (from 7 years of age),
Field player aged 11–18 years (performance oriented), Field player aged 18–35 years (performance oriented), ‘Lifelong’ field player. The authors say “very small children playing, professional football players and workers installing or maintaining the STPs were not part of the risk assessment.” Comment: residents who live nearby were not seen as a targeted risk category, even though their cumulative exposure in time may potentially be more than a player who visits and uses a synthetic pitch on a limited but regular basis.
The study confirms while single source exposure from rubber granulate was shown not to present a health risk, it may contribute to a cumulative exposure to these substances from other sources and “may still contribute to a possible health risk when the total exposure via all sources exceeds the toxicological reference value of a substance.” While this study confirmed health risk was well below threshold levels for cancer (1 in one million) for the targeted groups, it recommended a review of the conclusions when the results of the ongoing, large-scale studies in the US become available.
Qian Y., Follett R. (2012) Carbon Dynamics and Sequestration in Urban Turfgrass Ecosystems. In: Lal R., Augustin B. (eds) Carbon Sequestration in Urban Ecosystems. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2366-5_8
Keywords: Carbon sequestration, Natural turf
Highlights importance of leaving grass clippings in place, minimising fertiliser and irrigation, electrifying maintenance carbon costs (mowing).
From the abstract: “Turfgrasses exhibit significant carbon sequestration (0.34–1.4 Mg ha−1 year−1) during the first 25–30 years after turf establishment. Several studies have reported that residential turfgrass soil can store up to twofold higher soil organic carbon (SOC) content than agricultural soils. Published research suggests that the dynamics of nitrogen (N) is controlled by C transformation. Turfgrass areas have high levels of SOC and microbial biomass creating a carbon-based “sink” for inorganic N. Therefore, lower than “expected” nitrate leaching and N2O emissions have been measured in the majority of the experiments carried out for turfgrass ecosystems. Increased SOC in turfgrass soil can result from: (1) returning and recycling clippings, (2) appropriate and efficient-fertilizer use, and (3) irrigation based on turfgrass needs. Some turfgrass management practices (such as fertilization, mowing, and irrigation) carry a carbon “cost”. Therefore turfgrass’s contribution to a sink for carbon in soils must be discounted by fuel and energy expenses and fertilizer uses in maintaining turf, and the flux of N2O.”
Flora Rendell-Bhatti, Periklis Paganos, Anna Pouch, Christopher Mitchell, Salvatore D’Aniello, Brendan J. Godley, Ksenia Pazdro, Maria Ina Arnone, Eva Jimenez-Guri, (2021), Developmental toxicity of plastic leachates on the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus, Environmental Pollution, Volume 269, 2021, 115744, ISSN 0269-7491,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115744
Keywords: Environmental context, microplastics, marine
“We have shown that plastic leachates in seawater contain chemicals which are known to be detrimental to animals. We have also demonstrated that microplastic leachates from beached pellets (biobead and nurdle pellets) and highly plasticised industrial pellets (PVC) elicit severe, consistent and treatment-specific developmental abnormalities in sea urchin (P. lividus) embryos. In contrast, embryos exposed to virgin polyethylene leachates, with no additives nor environmental contaminants, exhibited normal development. Hence, our results strongly suggest that the abnormalities observed are a result of both the environmental adsorbed contaminants and pre-existing industrial additives within the polymer matrix.
“We screened for a series of possible contaminants—additives from the manufacturing process and environmental pollutants adsorbed from the seawater—leaching from the plastic particles: phthalates, PCBs and PAHs. As common, harmful, industrial additive in plastic production, we analysed phthalate contents.”
Comment: impact of microplastics on the marine ecosystem. Note the hacky structure of microplastics means it can act as a vector for other contaminants.
Reuters News Agency staff, (9 December 2020) EU-wide ban would save nature from 500,000 tonnes of microplastics - agency https://www.reuters.com/article/environment-plastic-eu/eu-wide-ban-would-save-nature-from-500000-tonnes-of-microplastics-agency-idUSKBN28J1EE
Keywords: Grey Literature, Synthetic turf, microplastics
The European Chemical Agency (ECHA) highlighted that “Artificial sports pitches release up to 16,000 tonnes of microplastics into nature each year and so the ECHA said their sale should either be banned after a six-year transition period or cheaper measures should be made mandatory to help mitigate the problems, such as fences or brushes.”
Rochman, C.M. (2020) The story of plastic pollution: From the distant ocean gyres to the global policy stage. Oceanography 33(3):60–70, https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2020.308
Keywords: microplastics, marine, pollution, environmental context
Gives a substantial overview of the problem of plastic and microplastic pollution in the oceans.
“As we continue to conduct research to better understand plastics in our ocean, the questions are no longer about whether there is plastic pollution, but instead: (1) what are the processes and extent to which plastic debris affects global change? (2) will we use science to inform solutions? and (3) are we willing to do the hard work to solve the problem of plastic pollution?”
Royer, Sarah-Jeanne., Ferrón, Sara., Wilson, Samuel T., Karl, David M. (August 2018) “Production of methane and ethylene from plastic in the environment”, Plos One. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200574
Keywords: Synthetic turf, microplastics, Greenhouse gas emissions
Synthetic turf is made of polyethylene yarn fibres. Polyethylene fibres are a source for greenhouse gas pollution as the polyethylene plastic breaks down, producing methane and ethylene.
This continues during the life (and disposal) of the product. If synthetic turf is disposed of by incineration you get a burst of greenhouse gas emissions. If the synthetic turf is sent to landfill as part of disposal, it slowly emits greenhouse gases as the plastic fibres degrade and break down. This also contributes to micro-plastics pollution, including leaching out of landfill into local waterways.
“The release of greenhouse gases from virgin and aged plastic over time indicates that polymers continue to emit gases to the environment for an undetermined period. We attribute the increased emission of hydrocarbon gases with time from the virgin pellets to photo-degradation of the plastic, as well as the formation of a surface layer marked with fractures, micro-cracks and pits [24–26]. With time, these defects increase the surface area available for further photo-chemical degradation and therefore might contribute to an acceleration of the rate of gas production. It is also known that smaller particles of secondary origin termed ‘microplastics’ [27,28] are eventually produced and may further accelerate gas production. The initial shape of the polymer is also a potential factor contributing to the variability in hydrocarbon production because items of the same mass but with different shapes have different surface-to-volume ratios. Small fragments not only have a greater surface-to-volume ratio than larger items, but they also tend to have longer edge lengths relative to their volume [29]. This predicts that in the environment, as plastic particles degrade and become smaller, they will also emit more hydrocarbon gases per unit mass.”
Concluding remarks: “Given the ongoing rate at which plastic is being produced, used and exposed on land and the future trend in mismanaged plastic waste ending up in marine systems [32], the amount of plastic exposed to the environment will likely increase with time and so too will the amount of CH4 and C2H4 emitted from polymers. In addition, degradation of plastics in the environment leads to the formation of microplastics with greater surface area, which may accelerate hydrocarbon gas production. Due to the longevity of plastics and the large amounts of plastic persisting in the environment, questions related to the role of plastic in the CH4 and C2H4 global budgets should be prioritized and addressed by the scientific community.”
Sahu, R. (2008). Technical assessment of the carbon sequestration potential of managed turfgrasses in the United States. Research report. http://multivu.prnewswire.com/broadcast/33322/33322cr.pdf
Keywords: carbon sequestration, natural turf
The review of literature found that “there is potential for significant carbon sequestration in turfgrass such as lawns and golf courses provided that they are properly cared for: managed lawns sequester, or store, significant amounts of carbon, capturing four times more carbon from the air than is produced by the engine of today’s typical lawnmower. This is an incremental benefit above and beyond the other numerous benefits of such turfgrass.
The study also finds that the carbon sequestration of turfgrasses can be maximized by measures such as cutting regularly and at the appropriate height, feeding with nutrients left by grass clippings, watering in a responsible way, and not disturbing grass at the root zone – all these measures help grass actively pull pollutants from the air, creating a greater carbon benefit.”
Critique: Does not consider Global Warming potential so ignores N2O emissions and Nitrogen flux.
SEA (Sports Environment Alliance) (2020) Future Proofing Community Sport & Recreation Facilities - A Roadmap for Climate Change Management for the Sport and Recreation Facilities Sector. https://www.sportsenvironmentalliance.org/resources/guide-to-future-proof-sport-recreation Accessed 7 March, 2021.
Keywords: Grey Literature, Environmental context, Sports, policy.
Project developed by the Sports Environment Alliance in partnership with the Victorian State Government. Although this report does not mention synthetic surfaces it includes strong sustainability guidelines on pp19.
“In the face of changing climate, it is recommended that ecological impact is strategically considered across the planning of places where we play, and embedded as business as usual in design and operations.
Furthermore, there are no ‘end points,’ only successes and milestones along the ever changing conditions and demands for mitigation and adaptation (McCullough, Pfahl, & Nguyen, 2015).
In future proofing our places of play, there are two key areas of opportunity: built environment and stakeholder engagement. How we design, build and then engage stakeholders to behave in alignment with how we operate our places of play must be focused on protecting our clean future. To address the built environment:
• consult internationally and locally recognised standards for ‘green’ and ‘healthy’ infrastructure
• conservation of the natural environment and positive impact on biodiversity;
• conservation of historic buildings and other cultural heritage;
• conservation of water resources;
• minimisation of energy use and of greenhouse gas emissions;
• minimisation of adverse impacts on land, water, noise and air quality;
• use of long-lasting environmentally and socially responsible materials;
• minimisation of waste and maximising reuse and recycling of materials;
• universal design;
• internal environments that foster health and well being; and
• creation of opportunities to leave a positive legacy for local businesses and communities. (“Sustainability Essentials: Introduction to Sustainability”, n.d., p. 47)
Siebentritt, Mark, Seed Consulting Services (May 2020) Final Report: Conveying the benefits of living turf ‐ Mitigation of the urban heat island effect, Horticulture Innovation Australia Ltd, Horticulture Australia, https://www.horticulture.com.au/growers/help-your-business-grow/research-reports-publications-fact-sheets-and-more/tu18000/ Keywords: Grey Literature, Natural Turf, urban heat island, UHIE, bitumen, synthetic turf, Australia This study compared natural turf, synthetic turf and bitumen relative surface temperatures for the cities of Adelaide, Sydney and Melbourne. It found the surface temperature of irrigated natural turf measured 4.9°C cooler than the baseline average surface temperature. Long pile synthetic turf measured nearly 11 °C hotter than average, with the surface temperature of synthetic turf in some instances recorded at over 70°C. The study also found where surface materials lead to an increase in air temperature by 1.85°C, this could produce an increase in local residential cooling energy use and utility costs up to 72% in Melbourne, 51% in Sydney and 48% for Adelaide. The study also identified that synthetic surface may provide a beneficial reduction in winter space heating needs. "The net energy use across both seasons is ultimately influenced by the type and efficiency of heating and cooling systems." It aknowledges a cool park effect for synthetic turf located in grassed reserves and large open spaces: "The results suggest that in large areas of open space such as occurs around irrigated sporting and recreation fields and parks and reserves, the cooling benefits from living turf are significant enough to outweigh the warming effects of surfaces such as synthetic turf and bitumen. In these areas the localised warming that does occur appears to be quickly mixed with cooler surrounding air, especially when there is a light breeze. As such, people walking or playing sport over these surfaces benefit from what might be considered as “borrowed cooling” from nearby cooler areas. The extent of this borrowed cooling effect requires further investigation." Comment: It does not define how much open space is needed to mitigate heat in a synthetic pitch. The study did a Surface‐to‐air relationship assessment which found: * When compared with irrigated living turf, natural materials (bare ground and non-irrigated living turf) averaged 10 °C warming over the target surface (between the 1 m and 4 m marks), whereas synthetic materials (playing court, bitumen, and synthetic turf) averaged 23°C of warming. * At all times during the three hot days of data collection, average surface temperatures over irrigated living turf remained between 34 and 42 °C. Temperatures over the target surfaces ranged from 42 to 70°C, with synthetic turf being the hottest measuring between 25 and 33 °C hotter than irrigated living turf between the 1 and 4 m marks. Peak temperatures over 70°C for synthetic turf align with observations of the same material recorded in studies by Jim (2017). * Analysis showed a strong negative correlation between maximum air temperatures and wind speed. This means that increased wind speeds diminish the maximum air temperatures recorded over a given surface type, in many cases masking the impact of the much higher surface temperatures of constructed or synthetic materials. Much stronger relationship between surface and air temperature, at 10 cm high. Comment: Urban heat island is more pronounced at night. This study does not provide any analysis on likely impact of synthetic turf on night time air temperatures. Loveday (2019) found that synthetic turf did not reach average temperatures until mid-evening, so could be providing heating to air temperatures in the early evening affecting the local microclimate.
Simpson, Thomas J., Robert A. Francis, (2021), Artificial lawns exhibit increased runoff and decreased water retention compared to living lawns following controlled rainfall experiments, Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, Volume 63, 2021, 127232, ISSN 1618-8667,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2021.127232. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1618866721002570
Keywords: hydrology, water Comment: Experimental confirmation that Living grass is significantly better at retaining water and delaying drainage compared to both short and long artificial grasses. This is why well built artificial turf pitches require subsurface drainage, water storage and recycling as part of the build. If the same drainage structure was applied to turf fields with regular soil maintenance as argued by Lambie and Battam (2020) playing capacity could be increased to 35-40 hours per week on natural turf fields.
Slater G (2010) The Cooling Ability of Urban Parks. https://www.asla.org/2010studentawards/169.html
Keywords: heat, UHIE
A study on the cooling impact of parks (or park cooling effect) in moderating the Urban Heat Island Effect conducted in the Canadian city of Toronto. According to the researcher:
“The most important findings of this research were that:
parks were cooler than the surrounding urban environment by up to 7°C
park cooling was variable but could extend almost 100m downwind into the neighborhood
not all parks produced cool air extension
busy streets appeared to inhibit cool air movement
street trees could substantially reduce air temperatures underneath them”
Sport and Recreation Victoria (Feb 2011), Artificial Grass for Sport Guide. https://sport.vic.gov.au/publications-and-resources/community-sport-resources/artificial-grass-sport-guide Accessed 21 March, 2021
Keywords: Grey Literature, Sports, policy, Australia, Melbourne
See in particular Part 3 of 8. Does not do a life cycle assessment analysis of greenhouse gas emissions, instead uses 2010 study to highlight athletic/sports fields may not be carbon sinks in sequestering CO2e but ignores the high emissions of synthetic turf, especially in manufacturing and disposal. Emissions in disposal (landfill for Australia) are virtually ignored.
Su, Yinglong., Zhang, Zhongjian., Wu, Dong., Zhan, Lu., Shi, Huahong., Xie, Bing., (2019)
Occurrence of microplastics in landfill systems and their fate with landfill age,
Water Research, Volume 164, 2019, 114968, ISSN 0043-1354,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.114968
(https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0043135419307420)
Keywords: Microplastics, waste, pollution, Synthetic turf
While the study doesn’t mention synthetic turf explicitly, it does mention polypropylene and polyethylene in its analysis of landfill refuse and leachates.
“Microplastics have the potential to absorb organic contaminants and heavy metals, and then transport these contaminants or enrich them in biota, thus imposing major impacts on human health and ecosystems (Bouwmeester et al, 2015)....”
“the MPs were generally irregular in shape and hackly in structure; thus, the breakdown of plastic debris was the primary contributor to MPs (i.e., secondary MPs). Furthermore, the hackly surface of MPs would benefit the enrichment of contaminants such as heavy metals and organic contaminants (Koelmans et al., 2016), which could enhance the environmental risk of leachate discharged to the environment.”
In most of my reading very little attention has been placed on end life disposal of synthetic turf and long term environmental impact. As the synthetic fibres breakdown into Microplastics they cause greenhouse gas emissions as well as Microplastics pollution of waterways and ecosystems and may operate as a vector for organic contaminants and heavy metals due to their inherent structure.
At present all synthetic turf in Australia ends up in landfill, with very little recycling done globally. While manufacturers may specify their fibres are ‘recycleable’, there are no process capacity set up to do the recycling due to the high costs involved.
Sun C, Hurley J, Amati M, Arundel J, Saunders A, Boruff B, Caccetta P (2019) Urban Vegetation, Urban Heat Islands and Heat Vulnerability Assessment in Melbourne, 2018. Clean Air and Urban Landscapes Hub, Melbourne, Australia https://www.planning.vic.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0018/440181/UHI-and-HVI2018_Report_v1.pdf
Keywords: Australia, Melbourne, heat, UHI, remote sensing
Report commissioned by Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP), Victorian Government. This updates previous heat vulnerability assessment by Loghnan et al (2013) for Melbourne. This uses Land Surface temperatures via remote sensing satellite measurements to provide an assessment of the relationship between UHI and vegetation cover.
"The correlation between urban green space and cooler urban temperatures has been established."
Landsat 8 thermal infrared data used for this study were collected by the USGS at approximately 9.50 AM Eastern Standard Time (EST); 10:50 AM Daylight Saving Time (DST). This data collection timing is due to "Land surface temperatures are most close to near-ground air temperatures early in the morning." So this report reveals the daytime UHI and relationship with vegetation and the built environment. Heat vulnerability was then also incorporated based on three component layers: heat exposure, sensitivity to heat, and adaptive capability.
The average difference (°C) in Land Surface Temperature (LST) to baseline LST (°C) between LGAs ranged from 4.66C for Mornington Peninsula to 10.75C for Brimbank. Moreland Council mean UHI was 9.2C.
Statistical analysis was performed for vegetation structure variables and Land Surface Temperature (remember this data was collected in the morning)
"This shows:
* Grass has a weak negative impact on UHI (r =-0.034).
* Shrub has weak negative impact on UHI (r = -0.162).
* All individual tree types have medium negative impact on UHI (-0.4 > r > -0.5).
* All trees and shrubs&trees have medium negative impact on UHI (r <-0.5).
* Therefore in terms of reducing UHI, it is trees that would have the most impact, whereas shrubs minor and grass very little.
Critique: While highly valuable for determining daytime UHI, previous research has shown that UHI is more pronounced as a night-time phenomena (Coutts et al 2008). This caveat wasn't explained in this research. Parks with extensive tree coverage tend to be cooler during the afternoon due to shading effects, while more open parks with turf are cooler at night due to greater long-wave radiative cooling, according to Melbourne based research by Coutts et al (2012). Therefore, the recommendation that trees have most impact on UHI needs further research.
Thoms, Adam William, "Sources of Heat in Synthetic Turf Systems. " (2015) PhD diss., University of Tennessee. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/3475
Keywords: Heat, Synthetic turf
Looked at the heat impact of synthetic turf and assessed possible ways to partially reduce the surface temperature of the synthetic turf. It concluded: “Forced air applied either to the synthetic turf surface or forced through the sub-surface aggregate base lowered the synthetic turf surface temperature. Synthetic turf painted with reflective pigments also reduced surface temperature compared to the non-treated control. These findings indicate that synthetic turf surface temperatures can be reduced without the use of water.” This likely led to the development of ‘Cool Grass’ 4th generation synthetic turf technology which increases grass fibre reflectivity so the grass surface heats up about 10-15 per cent less, reflecting this heat to the air above.
Tidåker, P., Wesström, T. and Kätterer T., (2017) Energy use and greenhouse gas emissions from turf management of two Swedish golf courses, Urban For. Urban Green., 21 (2017), pp. 80-87 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2016.11.009
Keywords: LCA, Energy, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, natural turf, carbon sequestration
A study on turf management of 2 Swedish golf courses and implications for energy use and greenhouse gas emissions. Used Life-cycle Assessment methodology to evaluate primary energy and greenhouse gas emissions. Highlighted the problem of N20 emissions with fertiliser application and decomposition of grass clippings. Highlighted high energy use in mowing and need to electrify machinery to reduce energy and hidden carbon costs, and to minimise fertiliser use for both energy and GHG savings.
“Soil organic C stocks are generally higher in grassland soil than in arable soil (Poeplau and Don, 2013). Since the golf courses studied here were established on arable land, which probably had a history of mixed farming, it is likely that C stocks in the turf have increased since establishment of the golf courses about 50 years ago. The topsoil (0–20 cm depth) in the fairway and rough areas currently contains about 80 Mg C ha−1 on average over the two sites (unpublished data), which is 23% more than the C content in mineral agricultural topsoils in the region (Andrén et al., 2008). If this difference in C storage is attributed to turf management over 50 years, soil sequestration in fairway and rough areas would amount to 0.3 Mg C ha−1 year−1. Thus including soil C sequestration reduced the GHG emissions from fairways considerably and turned roughs into a sink for GHG.”
The study recommends: “Appropriate measures for reducing energy use and carbon footprint from lawn management are thus: i) reduced mowing frequency when applicable, ii) investment in electrified machinery, iii) lowering the mineral N fertiliser rate (especially on fairways) and iv) reducing the amount and transport of sand for dressing. Lowering the mineral fertiliser rate is of particular importance, since GHG emissions originate from both the manufacturing phase and from N turnover after application.”
Townsend-Small, A. and Czimczik, C. (2010a). Carbon Sequestration and Greenhouse Gas
Emissions in Urban Turf. Geophys. Res. Lett. 37.
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2009GL041675
Keywords: LCA, Carbon sequestration, Greenhouse gas emissions, natural turf
While urban lawns and grasslands, if managed carefully, can operate as carbon sinks due to Organic Carbon Sequestration in soil, this research argues that in athletic fields there is no Organic Carbon sequestration because of frequent surface restoration. The research particularly highlights the problem of fertiliser/irrigation use associated with higher Nitrous Oxide (NO2) emissions (Global warming potential is 300x stronger than CO2)
“In athletic fields, there is no net storage of CO2 to offset N2O emissions. Overall, according to our careful measurements, N2O emissions are too low to overcome the high rates of OC sequestration in ornamental lawns…. High CO2 uptake in lawns is not without a “carbon cost” from fossil fuel CO2 emitted during maintenance. We made rough estimates of CO2 emissions derived from fuel consumption, irrigation and fertilizer production.”
Note: Zhang et al (2013) identified a flaw in Townsend-Small and Czimczik, (2010): “One study conducted in California has shown that turfgrasses serve as either sources or sinks of global warming depending on fertilization rates (Townsend-Small and Czimczik, 2010). However, the fertilization rate of 750 kg N ha -1 yr -1 in that experiment is considered extremely high and is rarely used in the turfgrass industry (Law et al., 2004).”
Townsend-Small, A. and Czimczik, C. (2010b). Correction to Carbon Sequestration and Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Urban Turf. Geophys. Res. Lett. 37.
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2010GL042735
Keywords: LCA, Carbon sequestration, Greenhouse gas emissions, natural turf
One also needs to read the correction to the study issued two months later, based upon “error in the calculation of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fuel consumption during turfgrass maintenance.” :
“This changes the total global warming potential (GWP) of both ornamental lawns and athletic fields (Figure 3b). Based on this correction, the total GWP of ornamental lawns ranges from −108 g CO2 m−2 yr−1 for the low fertilization scenario (10 g N m−2 yr−1) to +285 g CO2 m−2 yr−1 for the high fertilizer scenario (75 g N m−2 yr−1). In athletic fields, which do not store OC in soils, there is a positive GWP ranging from +405 to +798 g CO2 m−2 yr−1 for the low and high fertilizer scenarios, respectively.”
Final conclusion: “This reanalysis shows that there may be a potential for urban ornamental lawns to sequester atmospheric CO2 if they are managed conservatively (Figure 3b). However, intensive management practices such as frequent application of inorganic fertilizers, irrigation, and fuel consumption from mowing and leaf blowing all decrease the likelihood that urban turfgrass can mitigate greenhouse gas emissions in cities.”
UNEP (February 2021) Making Peace with Nature. A scientific Blueprint to tackle the climate, biodiversity and pollution emergencies. ISBN 978-92-807-3837-7 https://www.unep.org/resources/making-peace-nature
Keywords: Grey Literature, Environmental context, biodiversity, microplastics, policy
A meta report from the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) highlighting the multiple crises we face with climate, biodiversity and pollution. It highlights we need to tackle these problems simultaneously with nature based solutions playing a vital role.
“Global warming exacerbates the urban heat island effect in cities and their surroundings, especially during heatwaves, increasing people’s exposure to heat stress.” pp 26
“Disposal, release and leaks of chemicals, nutrients and waste are driving environmental declines, especially in aquatic ecosystems. Pollution is regarded as the third most important driver of biodiversity loss in freshwater and the fourth in terrestrial and marine systems (see figure 3.1). Up to 400 million tons of heavy metals, solvents, toxic sludge and other industrial wastes are dumped annually into the world’s waters, and fertilizers entering coastal ecosystems have produced dead zones. 96 Marine plastic pollution has increased tenfold since 1980, constituting 60 to 80 per cent of marine debris, and is found in all oceans at all depths and concentrates in the ocean currents. Marine plastics cause ecological impacts from entanglement and ingestion and can also act as a vector for invasive species and pollutants. 97,98,99 There has been a near-doubling of the global chemical industry’s production capacity between 2000 and 2017.” pp63
“Given the interconnected nature of climate change, loss of biodiversity, land degradation, and air and water pollution, it is essential that these problems are tackled together urgently. Actions needs to be taken now even where the benefits may not be realized for years due to the long-lasting nature of environmental effects or to inertia in the socioeconomic system.” pp107
“Substantial gains in the protection of nature can be achieved through the sustainable management and restoration of landscapes and seascapes that are productive and often inhabited. Transformative actions to reduce the drivers of biodiversity loss must necessarily occur mostly in human-populated and production-oriented landscapes and seascapes outside of protected areas. This requires the development of new land- and resource-use rules and objectives that are beneficial, neutral or at least much less harmful to biodiversity, while permitting uses benefitting humans.” pp 109
Valeriani, Federica., Margarucci, Lory Marika., Gianfranceschi, Gianluca., Ciccarelli, Antonello., Tajani, Filippo., Mucci, Nicolina., Ripani, Maurizio., Spica, Vincenzo Romano., (August 2019) Artificial-turf surfaces for sport and recreational activities: microbiota analysis and 16S sequencing signature of synthetic vs natural soccer fields, Heliyon, Volume 5, Issue 8, 2019, e02334, ISSN 2405-8440, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e02334
(https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019359948 )
Keywords: Synthetic turf, Natural turf, Microbiota, Health, infection, Sports.
A study looking at the bacterial and microbiotic differences between natural turf and synthetic grass sporting pitches. There are more incidents of abrasions and turf burns from artificial grass which may provide a pathway for bacterial and microbial infections. A major factor driving microbial diversity on synthetic surfaces is contamination with human sweat or saliva as well as from the natural microflora in the surrounding area. This highlights the importance of regular disinfecting maintenance required.
“Recent studies have showed higher rates of abrasion injuries on artificial turf surfaces compared to natural grass playing fields (Twomey et al., 2018; Meyers, 2013; Williams et al., 2016)..... The microbiological risk has been less investigated, even if several studies raised a possible association between turf burns and infections in injured athletes, identifying the synthetic turf as a possible source of pathogens, including community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and other antibiotic resistant microorganisms (CDC, 2003; Kirkland and Adams, 2008; Cohen, 2008). It was suggested that the turf infill may represent a favourable niche for the accumulation and selection of bacteria species, especially if maintenance is not regularly and appropriately performed (Bass and Hintze, 2008).”
“Interestingly, bacteria from different sources can be found in synthetic turfs, but not conversely in natural ones. Different synthetic materials already were shown to provide a cozy microenvironment to harbour bacteria from anthropic, animal (e.g. Staphylococcus, Streptomyces, Nocardioldes, Hymenobacter), or other natural sources (Williamsia, Chryseobacterium, Rhodococcus) (Mafu et al., 1990; Carniello et al., 2018; Sharma et al., 2018; Masoud, 2017). Therefore, a major factor driving beta-diversity variance in artificial surfaces may likely be due to contamination with human sweat or saliva as well as from the natural microflora in the surrounding area. This was not observed in natural turfs probably due to the competition driven by the rich endophytic microflora (Simon et al., 2019; Hassani et al., 2018; Mafu et al., 1990). Mesophilic bacteria, including pathogens, were detected more frequently in the penalty area and centre circle of synthetic turfs, even if the analysis of similarities for the several sampling points showed no changes in microflora profile. These results suggest that microbial communities fluctuate around a common biodiversity centroid, as already reported for other sport plants (Wood et al., 2015). However, within the same facility clear differences can be observed between different sampled areas. The whole of observed results suggests that in synthetic fields the microbial community structure is primarily defined by the anthropic contamination. Management, use, and maintenance of the facility may also play a major role in determining the microbial load and its composition. Infill materials can represent a potential source for bacterial grow posing putatively higher infection risks respect to natural fields, as previously reported for cased of cutaneous infections in soccer players using synthetic turfs (CDC, 2003; Kirkland and Adams, 2008; Cohen, 2008).”
van Delden, L., Larsen, E., Rowlings, D. et al. (2016) Establishing turf grass increases soil greenhouse gas emissions in peri-urban environments. Urban Ecosyst 19, 749–762 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11252-016-0529-1
Keywords: carbon sequestration, Natural turf, Brisbane, Australia
This South East Queensland based study found that turf grass in the subtropical climate added to the Global Warming Potential due to elevated N2O emissions due to fertiliser and irrigation regimes. The study focussed on the first 80 days after establishment and noted that emissions can be expected to decrease over a longer time period.
“Turf grass, as the major peri-urban land cover, increased the GWP by 415 kg CO 2 -e ha -1 over the first 80 days after conversion from a well-established pasture. This results principally from increased daily average N 2 O emissions of 0.5 g N 2 O ha -1 d -1 from the pasture to 18.3 g N 2 O ha -1 d -1 from the turf grass due to fertilizer application during conversion. Compared to the native dry sclerophyll eucalypt forest, turf grass establishment increases the GWP by another 30 kg CO 2 -e ha -1 . The results presented in this study clearly indicate the substantial impact of urbanization on soil-atmosphere gas exchange in form of non-CO 2 greenhouse gas emissions particularly after turf grass establishment.”
“Calculating a general annual GWP estimate from daily non-CO 2 GHG fluxes from the SERF turf grass soil results in 1.9 t CO 2 -e ha -1 y -1 and exceeds reported values from irrigated lawns in temperate Australia 1.6 times (Livesley et al. 2010). This coarse annual GWP is based on daily averages from the first 80 days after turf grass establishment and can be expected to decrease over time. The climate and continuously high management necessary in the subtropics, however, might results in less decrease than expected from temperate climates.”
Conclusion:
“This study distinguishes that turf grass lawn establishment in peri-urban environments such as Samford in SEQ, Australia, significantly increases soil GHG emissions. The environmental conditions examined here are representative for wide areas in Australia and highlight the need for optimised management strategies for peri-urban environments after land use change. Intensely managed land cover like turf grass will result in highly elevated N 2 O emissions due to N fertilizer use and irrigation, as well as being accelerated by the subtropical climate. This unique data set is the baseline for long term research on peri-urban environments in the humid subtropics. The Global Warming Potential of land use change, as determined in this study, needs to be included in future climate scenarios models to estimate the full impact of urbanization on climate change and ecosystem health.”
van Kleunen, Mark., Brumer, anna., Gutbrod, Lisa., Zhang, Zhijie., (2020) A microplastic used as infill material in artificial sport turfs reduces plant growth., PLANTS, PEOPLE, PLANET DOI: 10.1002/ppp3.10071 https://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ppp3.10071
Keywords: infill, synthetic turf, biodiversity, plants, microplastics.
Ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM) is a microplastic used in artificial sport turfs. This study researched the impact of this microplastic on native grasses located close to a sporting pitch showing that at concentrations of 5% and higher there was strong negative effects on plant survival and growth.
“At very low concentrations of the EPDM granules, growth of P. lanceolata was slightly improved, but at concentrations of 5% and higher there were strong negative effects on survival and growth. These negative effects were found under low and high nutrient conditions, and for all tested species. The EPDM granules also negatively affected the root weight ratio, which indicates that the root system was more strongly affected than the shoot. Due to the strong negative effects on plant growth, the granules also reduced the competitive interactions between plants.
Our study shows that it is not only animals in aquatic environments that may be affected by plastic pollution, and that this may also be the case for wild plants in terrestrial ecosystems.”
“We show here that, while low concentrations do not necessarily slow down growth, volumetric concentrations of 5% or higher may have strong detrimental effects on the survival and growth of wild plant species, in the case of the EPDM infill granules that were used in this study. Nevertheless, given the paucity of data, it is still too early to draw general conclusions about the effects of microplastics on plant growth. Clearly more studies on the effects of different plastic types and concentrations are needed, as well as long‐term studies in natural communities that also include other soil organisms that might be affected by plastic pollution.”
Velasco, Erik., Roth, Matthias., Norford, Leslie., Molina, Luisa T., (2016) Does urban vegetation enhance carbon sequestration?, Landscape and Urban Planning, Volume 148, Pages 99-107, ISSN 0169-2046, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2015.12.003.
(https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169204615002455)
Keywords: Carbon sequestration
This study looked at the carbon fluxes in 2 residential neighborhoods: one in Singapore and one in Mexico city and the role of vegetation and soil respiration. The authors suggest the “impact of urban vegetation to reduce GHG emissions directly through carbon sequestration is very limited or null.”
While interesting, it does not really shed light on natural turf vs synthetic turf debate, except to highlight the need for “complete assessment should include emissions associated with greenery management (i.e. pruning, mowing, watering, fertilizing, debris removing, etc.) which could further offset any carbon reduction (e.g., Townsend-Small & Czimczik, 2010).”
WA State Government Department of Sport, (2011) Natural Grass vs Synthetic Turf Decision Making Guide. https://www.dlgsc.wa.gov.au/department/publications/publication/natural-grass-vs-synthetic-turf-study-report
Keywords: heat, synthetic turf, natural turf, LCA, water, Costs, Policy, Perth, Australia
The WA State Government Department of Sport prepared a detailed Natural Grass vs Synthetic Turf report and Decision Making Guide. The guide devotes a section to Heat issues – natural grass and synthetic surfaces which contains temperature comparisons between natural grass and artificial turf from studies carried out in the US, Japan and elsewhere, focusing on third generation artificial turf.
In looking at the social impact this report really only considers organised sport and not informal active recreation use of sporting grounds, including informal playing of common sports.
The report does provide some total life cycle cost comparisons. Synthetic turf costs more than double natural grass on both 25 year and 50 year time scales.
“In conclusion, detailed consideration of a variety of environmental factors needs to be taken into account when planning the installation of a synthetic turf or natural grass surface. It is advisable to conduct and seek further research and information in this area, as there are many helpful resources available that are referenced but not fully expanded on within this report.”
Good background, but more recent research over the last decade in all the areas need to be considered. There is also a need to consider a change in the general context over the last decade to include the climate emergency, a biodiversity crisis and plastics pollution crisis that needs to be given much more weight against the social considerations and benefits for sporting organisations.
Williams, Frank C., and Pulley, Gilbert E., (2002), Synthetic Surface Heat Studies, Brigham Young University
https://aces.nmsu.edu/programs/turf/documents/brigham-young-study.pdf
Keywords: Heat, Synthetic turf,
One of the early studies highlighting the urban heat of synthetic surfaces and often for the need of water cooling to ensure safety of users of the sports field. The study found that surface temperatures on synthetic plastic fields can reach temperatures up to 21.1 degrees C higher than on natural grass fields, with temperatures in some cases reaching greater than 65.6 degrees C. (37 degrees Fahrenheit, or 20.5 degrees C, higher than the air temperature.)
“The heating characteristics of the A.T. make cooling during events a priority. The Safety Office at B.Y.U. set 120º F as the maximum temperature that the surface could reach. When temperature reaches 122º F it takes less than 10 minutes to cause injury to skin. At this temperature the surface had to be cooled before play was allowed to continue on the surface. The surface is monitored constantly and watered when temperatures reach the maximum. The heat control adds many maintenance dollars to the maintenance budget.”
Final conclusion:
“Artificial turf surfaces have their place in the turf industry. They can work in environments
where grass will not grow and are marginal. However, they are costly and not maintenance free.
It is important to take all the factors in to consideration before making a large investment. Don’t
take the manufacture’s word for the factors of concern i.e. don’t let the fox guard the hen house.
The propaganda on BYU’s installation is charts with surface temperatures less than the air
temperature and claims for drainage of 60 inches per hour. The question still remains is A.T.
11.47 times better than natural turf?”
Xu, E.G., Lin, N., Cheong, R.S., (...), Larsson, H.C.E., Tufenkji, N. (2019) Artificial turf infill associated with systematic toxicity in an amniote vertebrate, PNAS December 10, 2019 116 (50) 25156-25161; first published November 25, 2019; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1909886116
Keywords: Synthetic turf, toxicity, infill, rubber, health, leachates
The health risk of the use of crumb rubber infill in synthetic sporting fields is far from settled as shown in this toxicology study using a vertebrate model using Crumb Rubber leachate published in the highly respected PNAS journal. It supports various studies showing environmental impacts of Crumb rubber leachates on aquatic life.
“Significance: Athletes and children are playing on artificial turfs. However, the health risk associated with exposure to crumb rubber from artificial turfs is unknown for higher vertebrates. Here, we employed chicken embryo as a developing amniote vertebrate model to show that toxic leachate from artificial athletic turf infill impairs the early development of chicken, notably brain and cardiovascular system. This study triggers a scientific discussion as to whether crumb rubber is an appropriate infill material for artificial fields.”
“Over 300 chemicals have been identified in CR, of which nearly 200 are predicted to be carcinogenic and genotoxic (1). The majority of these potential carcinogens are not listed in the databases of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) nor the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) due to the absence of toxicological evaluation.”
“The results showed that CR leachate injected into the yolk caused mild to severe developmental malformations, reduced growth, and specifically impaired the development of the brain and cardiovascular system, which were associated with gene dysregulation in aryl hydrocarbon receptor, stress-response, and thyroid hormone pathways. The observed systematic effects were probably due to a complex mixture of toxic chemicals leaching from CR, such as metals (e.g., Zn, Cr, Pb) and amines (e.g., benzothiazole). This study points to a need to closely examine the potential regulation of the use of CR on playgrounds and artificial fields.”
“Existing risk assessments of artificial athletic turf or CR have suggested low or negligible environmental and human health risks (2–5). However, none of these studies used a vertebrate model. Human health assessments often focused on youth or adult professional players, but the potential risk to younger children could be higher due to their earlier stage of development and frequent hand and facial ground contact. Moreover, the risk to human embryos via maternal exposure to CR is unknown. Environmental risk assessments are usually based on acute toxicity tests with invertebrate species on limited simple toxicological endpoints such as mortality. Chronic tests of CR on vertebrate species are lacking but critically needed because the release of toxic chemicals from CR is continuous and the leaching of contaminants from aging CR can be significant over the field’s functional lifetime.”
Yaghoobian, N., Jan Kleissl, E. Scott Krayenhoff (2010) Modelling the Thermal Effects of
Artificial Turf on the Urban Environment. Journal of Applied Meteorology and
Climatology. Vol 49 332-345
http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/2009JAMC2198.1
Keywords: Synthetic turf, energy, water, heat, UHIE
Summary:This study models the thermal properties of artificial turf when used in the urban environment of California and compares its urban canopy energy balance to other surfaces such as concrete and asphalt. Synthetic grass has a lower albedo than most urban surfaces resulting in a reduction in shortwave radiation and an equal increase in longwave radiation, so there is less radiation being reflected to warm up surrounding walls. Synthetic grass warms up more than natural vegetation due to lack of evapotranspiration. The researchers note that there is anecdotal and evidence that synthetic turf surfaces can warm up as much as 20C more than regular grass surfaces. Using a 3D heat transfer model the researchers studied the effects of synthetic grass on the energy balance of nearby buildings and the temperature of the urban area. One of the major differences between artificial grass and manicured lawns is the water required to maintain natural lawns. The results indicated that the largest heat flux from ground to canopy occurs over artificial grass, but due to the low albedo, there is less shortwave radiation through windows in buildings near artificial grass resulting in a 17% lower design cooling load. However due to air temperature canopy heating it causes a 60% increase in the cooling loads for ventilation and conduction. The researchers point out that there is also embodied energy in water used in maintaining manicured lawns. When this energy in transport, delivery and use of water is accounted for there is a total energy use saving resulting in water and energy conservation. Drought tolerant plants which require significantly less water than lawn may have a similar effect as artificial turf conjecture the researchers.
Critique: This study raises many questions about how different surfaces in urban environments contribute to the urban heat island effect. NASA satellite photos of zonal temperature measurements of urban environments show artificial turf increases local surface temperatures. The researchers were surprised that artificial grass actually resulted in a total energy use saving once water use was factored in to the equations as compared to manicured and watered lawn surfaces.
“Using a simple offline convection model, replacing grass ground cover with artificial turf was found to add 2.3 kW h m -2 day -1 of heat to the atmosphere, which could result in urban air temperature increases of up to 4C.” The study also found that on energy usage for maintenance, “the net effect of replacement of grass surfaces with AT in coastal Southern California is a net water and energy savings’, however the study analysis did not include energy use related to production and disposal of Artificial Turf, as well as grass maintenance (lawn mowing, fertilizer), and was based on water use rates and costs specific to the location.
Yi, W., Cong, T., Chun-yue, L., Tredway, L., Lee, D., Snell, M., Xing-chang, Z., & Shuijin, H. (2014). Turfgrass management duration and intensities influence soil microbial dynamics and carbon sequestration. International Journal of Agriculture and Biology, 16, 139-145. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Yi-Wang-464/publication/286297628_Turfgrass_Management_Duration_and_Intensities_Influence_Soil_Microbial_Dynamics_and_Carbon_Sequestration/links/57e88a3a08aed7fe466bd91d/Turfgrass-Management-Duration-and-Intensities-Influence-Soil-Microbial-Dynamics-and-Carbon-Sequestration.pdf
Keywords: Carbon sequestration, natural turf,
A study conducted on two golf courses to assess the role of management practices in soil microbial activity and carbon sequestration. Results concluded: “Long term turfgrass planting accumulated soil organic C and N at rates of 71.9 and 10.6 g m-2 y-1 over 80 years. Moderate management intensity resulted in highest soil organic C and microbial biomass C. High N and water inputs stimulated decomposition and reduced the C accumulation in highly managed areas such as the tee area. These results suggest that management practices may critically affect organic C sequestration in turfgrass management systems.”
Zhang, Y., Qian, Y., Bremer, D.J. and Kaye, J.P. (2013), Simulation of Nitrous Oxide Emissions and Estimation of Global Warming Potential in Turfgrass Systems Using the DAYCENT Model. J. Environ. Qual., 42: 1100-1108. https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2012.0486
https://acsess.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.2134/jeq2012.0486
Keywords: carbon sequestration, natural turf
Investigates nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions and their Global Warming Potential (QWP) in natural turfgrass. Developed the DAYCENT model to help manage irrigation and fertiliser input to minimise long term nitrous oxide emissions.
Concludes: “The model simulation suggested that gradually reducing fertilization as the lawn ages from 0 to 50 yr would significantly reduce long-term N 2 O emissions by approximately 40% when compared with applying N at a constant rate of 150 kg N ha -1 yr -1 . Our simulation indicates that a Kentucky bluegrass lawn in Colorado could change from a sink to a weak source of greenhouse gas emissions 20 to 30 yr after establishment.”
The study also identifies a flaw in another key study (Townsend-Small and Czimczik, 2010): “One study conducted in California has shown that turfgrasses serve as either sources or sinks of global warming depending on fertilization rates (Townsend-Small and Czimczik, 2010). However, the fertilization rate of 750 kg N ha -1 yr -1 in that experiment is considered extremely high and is rarely used in the turfgrass industry (Law et al., 2004).”
Zembla (September 2018), What happens to plastic and polluting artificial turf?, Netherlands. video documentary (36 mins 27 secs) with English subtitles. https://youtu.be/Y5o3J7uy4Tk
Keywords: Grey Literature, Waste, Synthetic turf, pollution, infill, leachates
Investigative Journalism team Zembla probed the end of life disposal of synthetic turf, highlighting the extent of the problems. This highlights that even in Europe where there is some recycling of artificial turf, much of it is stockpiled as landfill left to cause pollution by companies contracted to recycle.
Zhu,Xia (January 2021), The Plastic Cycle – An Unknown Branch of the Carbon Cycle , Frontiers in Marine Science , DOI 10.3389/fmars.2020.609243
https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2020.609243
Keywords: plastic, microplastics, marine, Environmental context
Argues that Plastics are an unknown branch of the carbon cycle, being essentially a product of fossil fuels. This needs to be accounted for as a vector for carbon moving between the various reservoirs. Synthetic turf and the plastics it contains should be considered part of the carbon cycle. An associated news article at the Conversation: February 28, 2021 Plastic is part of the carbon cycle and needs to be included in climate calculations, Xia Zhu, University of Toronto.
https://theconversation.com/plastic-is-part-of-the-carbon-cycle-and-needs-to-be-included-in-climate-calculations-154730
“It is crucial to better understand just how much carbon is moving between reservoirs
in the form of plastic, and how plastic contributes to carbon cycling overall. In this discussion of plastic cycling and carbon cycling, there is a common theme of anthropogenic interference. While the carbon cycle has become altered as a result of anthropogenic activities, anthropogenic activities have catapulted the existence of the entire global plastic cycle itself.”
The author raises more questions than providing answers in her conclusion:
“To better understand the plastic cycle, we need to put values to various components of the plastic cycle both locally and globally. How much plastic resides in each reservoir (Figure 1b, white italicized text)? What are the fluxes of plastic in the atmosphere, in the ocean, and on land (Figure 1b, yellow text)? What are the fragmentation, degradation, and mineralization rates of plastic in various environments (Figure 1b, black text)? As we attempt to answer these questions, we also need to take into consideration how the magnitudes of the reservoirs and fluxes vary through space and time. Furthermore, we should think deeply about the interconnections between plastic and the carbon cycle and consider plastic within the bigger picture of the carbon cycle, by asking ourselves the following questions: how much carbon is moved by plastic locally and globally (Figure 1a, boxed text)? This must include through the atmosphere, terrestrial soils, aquatic environments, and via biotic transport.”
Zirkle, G., Rattan, L., and Augustin, B.. (2011) Modeling carbon sequestration in home lawns. HortScience 46: 808– 814. https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI.46.5.808
Keywords: Carbon sequestration, Natural turf
This study looked at and developed a model for carbon sequestration in home lawns in the USA. It included Nitrous Oxide (N2O) emissions in Hidden Carbon Costs. Home lawn maintenance practices differ from athletic sports fields maintenance.
“Net SOC sequestration in lawn soils was estimated using a simple mass balance model derived from typical homeowner lawn maintenance practices. The average SOC sequestration rate for U.S. lawns was 46.0 to 127.1 g C/m2/year. Additional C sequestration can result from biomass gains attributable to fertilizer and irrigation management. Hidden C costs are the amount of energy expended by typical lawn management practices in grams of carbon equivalents (CE)/m2/year and include practices including mowing, irrigating, fertilizing, and using pesticides. The net SOC sequestration rate was assessed by subtracting the HCC from gross SOC sequestration rate. Lawn maintenance practices ranged from low to high management. Low management with minimal input (MI) included mowing only, a net SOC sequestration rate of 25.4 to 114.2 g C/m2/year. The rate of SOC sequestration for do-it-yourself (DIY) management by homeowners was 80.6 to 183.0 g C/m2/year. High management, based on university and industry-standard best management recommendation practices (BMPs), had a net SOC sequestration rate of 51.7 to 204.3 g C/m2/year. Lawns can be a net sink for atmospheric CO2 under all three evaluated levels of management practices with a national technical potential ranging from 25.4 to 204.3 g C/m2/year.”
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