The Free Press Journal

Threatens future of golf, says report

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Wetter winters and coastal erosion linked to climate change are threatenin­g the future of golf, a report backed by governing body the R&A warned on Wednesday.

Golf is facing an increase in unplayable holes, winter course closures and disruption to profession­al tournament­s due to increased rainfall, while rising sea levels could jeopardise all the world's coastal courses by 2100.

Cricket is also facing "disruption at every level" of the game as a result of wetter winters and more intense summer downpours driven by climate change, said the report from Britain's Climate Coalition, which includes 130 organisati­ons.

Football is also affected, particular­ly at grassroots level, by adverse weather, while the Scottish skiing industry could collapse within 50 years as winters become too mild for regular snowfall.

Extreme weather is made worse by climate change, causing more golf course closures, while wetter, warmer autumns and winters cause damage and disease to grass and greens, the report said.

In the Greater Glasgow area alone there was a 20 percent reduction in playing time on golf courses in 2016/2017 compared with 2006/2007.

And one in six Scottish golf courses are on the coast, where they are at risk of erosion due to rising sea levels, caused by melting glaciers and oceans expanding as they warm, and more intense storms.

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