Post Tribune (Sunday)

Waving a greener flag

Indy 500 makes push to be more environmen­tally sustainabl­e

- By Mark Long

INDIANAPOL­IS — Parked a few feet from the iconic pagoda at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway is a reimagined E-Z-Go golf cart that’s essentiall­y filled with garbage. Plastic bottles tossed into recycling bins months ago are now neatly stacked in rows — and they’re for sale.

Going fast, too.

The electric cart houses hundreds of Indy 500 T-shirts made from waste. The clothes are as soft as anything on the shelves in the regular merchandis­e stores and cost roughly the same. And it’s no coincidenc­e they’re getting prime retail space, essentiall­y located at the front door to the famed racetrack.

They’re the centerpiec­e of IndyCar’s latest push to go green, dubbed “The Penske Initiative.” The series is taking more and more steps — some bigger than others — toward holding carbon-neutral races by 2050. No, really.

What may have been considered a laughable endeavor just a few years ago now seems like a reasonable goal despite IndyCar’s truckloads of fuel and tires, as well as countless pollutants like emissions, chemicals and petroleum products. And that doesn’t include the waste that will come with hosting nearly 300,000 fans for the 106th running of the Indy 500 on Sunday.

“It’s baby steps,” longtime IMS President Doug Boles said. “It’s like hundredths of a second for the cars. It doesn’t seem like much, but when you add up four or five changes, then all of sudden you’ve got a tenth of a second. That’s where we are. It’s lots of little things that at the end of the day hopefully make a big impact.”

That includes putting the traditiona­l balloon release on pause because of environmen­tal and wildlife impact concerns.

Here’s a look at some of the more notable ventures Penske Entertainm­ent has undertaken to help combat global warming and

Renewable fuel: IndyCar will become the first North American racing series to use 100% renewable fuel in its race cars.

Shell, the longtime fuel sponsor for the openwheel series, announced plans Friday to switch to a low-carbon fuel beginning in 2023. The new fuel will be a blend of second-generation ethanol derived from sugarcane waste and other biofuel, and it will create a fuel that is 100% composed of feedstocks categorize­d as renewable under the applicable regulatory frameworks. The oil giant says the fuel will decrease greenhouse gas emissions by 60% compared with fossil-based gasoline.

“You’ve got to be part of the solutions, and the way there is through these really potent partners who bring technology,” said Penske Entertainm­ent President and CEO Mark Miles. “Carbon reductions come from great technology and innovators. We have both.”

Renewable tires: Firestone has been working on a renewable tire since 2012 and is nearing the finish line to getting it on track.

The tire manufactur­er created a research center in Mesa, Arizona, a decade ago and hired hundreds of biologists, chemists and botanists to help develop the guayule shrub. The guayule produces natural rubber and appears to be the future of racing tires.

Roughly 90% of the world’s rubber comes from Hevea brasiliens­is in Southeast Asia. Harvesting those trees and getting the rubber back to North America is expensive and creates a heavy carbon footprint. It’s also subject to geopolitic­al instabilit­y.

The guayule is a cheaper, more sustainabl­e alternativ­e that renews itself in about three years and needs about 50% less water than other crops.

Guayule tires, distinguis­hed by green-painted sidewalls, made their IndyCar debut during the Pit Stop Challenge on Friday. They will get a more significan­t test at the Music City Grand Prix in Nashville,

Tennessee in August, when IndyCar will use tires made partially of guayule rubber.

“You don’t want to go straight to the Indianapol­is 500,” said Cara Krstolic, director of race tire engineerin­g for Bridgeston­e Americas Motorsport­s. “You want to get there in stages. One of the fun things about racing is every once and a while you get to showcase something that ends up in the car you and I will drive.”

Electric trucks: Penske Truck Leasing used two fully electric tractor-trailers to haul all the race tires used in May from Firestone’s distributi­on center. IndyCar installed a high-speed charging station at IMS that can get a truck close to fully charged in about three hours. The trucks made six trips to relocate 12 trailers filled with tires.

The expansion of electric tractor-trailers and the installati­on of more charging stations could be the next carbon-saving steps for a series that crosses the country regularly.

Composting and donating:

IMS installed a pilot program in May for collecting food waste and sending it to an off-site composting facility. Prepped and unused food, which in previous years would have gone in trash bins, is now being stored in a refrigerat­ed trailer to be taken daily to food banks.

Mobile merchandis­e: The electric golf cart filled with clothes made from recycling, though, has gotten the most attention at Indy this week. The cart has remained in one spot for the last two weeks, but officials plan to make it a rolling marketplac­e moving forward. It has a 50-mile range and comes equipped with an electric generator than runs LED lights and a point-of-sale device.

Each shirt is made partially from 6½ plastic bottles and uses water-based inks. There are five designs ranging in price between $32 and $35.

“When people get up there and feel the shirt, they can’t believe this is made out of plastic bottles,” said Raeann Suggs, senior buyer of merchandis­e for IMS and IndyCar. “I would have been like, ‘I’m not buying a shirt made out of plastic bottles. That’s going to be garbage!’ But it literally is garbage that feels amazing.”

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/AP ?? Renewable tires sit on the back of cart before the pit stop contest during at the Indianapol­is 500 auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Friday.
DARRON CUMMINGS/AP Renewable tires sit on the back of cart before the pit stop contest during at the Indianapol­is 500 auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Friday.

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