Environment
Golf Needs To Become Sustainable - Now!
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 23:15
On Monday, the attendees at this year's CMAA/CMAE/BMI conference, enjoyed a day of golf, touring the Nobel Museum and a congenial dinner. They probably were glad for the respite. Because during Sunday's seminars, they were exposed to some sobering thoughts about the future of golf courses and their operations in regards to the environment.
The message they received was that the debate has long been decided, and the future decisions about how to operate golf courses in a 21st Century of environmental reality due to public perception, government regulation and the impact that golf courses have on our Earth is now.
Fortunately, despite the dire warnings, the golf course managers were told that being eco-friendly can not only make their operations conform to rapidly stricter laws and codes, it can actually make golf courses profitable.
Currently, the public perception of golf is that it's a dalliance of the well off and that golf courses waste water, abuse local habitats and pollute with fertilizers and chemicals . In reality, recent studies out of Sweden and other countries are showing that not only do ponds and water areas of golf courses support more species of native flora and fauna then neighboring public protected areas, but that water flowing out of golf courses is cleaner than the water that flows in. Technical advances in irrigation, saving power consumption, recycling, heating and ventilation, and bio-friendly cleaners, solvents and chemicals are helping to reduce a golf course's impact on the local environment.
The CMAA has taken it upon itself to urge their members to begin a campaign to become more proactive in getting the message out to the general public that their perception of golf is not true any more. In this regard, the CMAA has entered into a agreement with the Golf Environment Organistaion, an international, non-profit organization, specializing in golf's sustainability. The G.E.O. is already working with the CMAE and the European Tour.
Environmental Programs in Swedish Golf
Information from The Swedish Golf Federation
For the last number of years, a great emphasis has been put on golf and the environment. A special ”Environmental Program for Swedish Golf” has been created, which serves as a guideline for the golf clubs and the Federation. Studies have shown, among other things, a most encouraging fact discovered at a club in the Stockholm area. Testing was done on the cleanliness of the water in the stream meandering through the golf course. Measurements were taken before its entry and after it exited the golf area. The result was that the water was cleaner upon leaving the golf course than when entering.
The Swedish Golf Federation supports the clubs in their efforts to reduce the use of fertilizers, and to improve exhaust emission controls on all vehicles, just to name a couple of ways. The Federation shows its support, also, by giving out diplomas to deserving clubs. In the process of creating new courses, cooperation is established with the Environmental Organizations. This cooperation has led to encouragement of new courses being built, while preserving the existing landscape.
One way this is accomplished is by saving larger areas of rough between the holes in order to keep nature as undisturbed as possible. Another example is that on Landskrona GC, in southern Sweden, the water hazard on the renowned 14th hole has been made a protected habitat for a very rare small frog.
Golf Courses May Protect Wetland Animals
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 23:15
Given the volume of pesticides and fertilizers needed to maintain their lush, manicured green grass, golf courses hardly seem like a hospitable place for
amphibians and other wetland creatures.
However, a new study suggests that golf course ponds can sustain wildlife just as well as nature reserves, and in some cases, even better.
The research examined golf course ponds in Stockholm, Sweden, comparing the species living there with those in ponds in nearby nature reserves and parks.
The team found no difference between the two groups in the species composition of invertebrates, including insects like dragonflies. Indeed, one type of dragonfly was found only in golf course ponds. For amphibians, the golf course ponds may even be a better habitat than park ponds, the researchers reported. Some species were more prevalent in golf course ponds than elsewhere. "The great crested newt was significantly associated with golf ponds," said study author Johan Colding of the Stockholm Resilience Center. The great crested newt is a protected species throughout Europe.Golf course ponds may be good places for newts because the ponds often lack fish and are kept clear of water-clogging plants -- ideal conditions for these critters, according to Colding.
But golf courses also are more "natural" than many people give them credit for, according to Ray Semlitsch of the University of Missouri. Semlitsch has done related studies of U.S. golf courses. "There is a lot more non-play area with natural habitat on these golf courses than you would expect," Semlitsch said. "About 70 percent is non-play habitat. In urban areas where there may not be much habitat left, golf courses are really one of the few recreational areas that are embedded in these urban areas. In some cases they are little oases." The study shows that golf courses can play an important role for conservation in cities and other impacted areas, but that doesn't mean courses harbor as much wildlife as natural settings.
"You do have to stand back a little bit," said Semlitch, "and say that the golf course ponds -- and probably all of the ponds they sampled -- probably lack some of the species that they would find in preserves."
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Jan Ekblom will have responsibility for overseeing investment in business analysis. General Secretary Gunnar Hakansson takes over operational responsibility in the area of Business & Events and Bo Bengtsson has been named Deputy Secretary-General.







