Padel, an extremely popular racket sport in Spain, is in the sights of animal defenders but also of the justice system, due to the high mortality caused by the glass walls of the grounds for birds.
“Padel courts”, like all “glass infrastructures”, “constitute a barrier that birds do not identify as a threat”, “despite their overdeveloped visual system”, underlines the NGO SEO/Birdlife which launched recently an awareness campaign on the subject.
They are for this reason at the origin of numerous “collisions”, which lead to “death or injuries”, adds the association in a press release. She specifies that she regularly finds deceased swallows, blackbirds and warblers “at the foot of the courts”.
A problem which “especially affects young individuals” and which is “exacerbated during periods of migration”, especially since padel courts are often built on the outskirts of towns and villages where biodiversity is important, insists SEO/Birdlife.
In recent years, several complaints from animal rights activists have been received by the Spanish justice system. This led the head of environmental issues within the General Prosecutor’s Office, Antonio Vercher, to take up the issue, relying on a recently adopted law concerning animal welfare.
In a letter addressed Monday to his colleagues from the various Spanish regional prosecutors’ offices, the latter called on “the competent administrations” to ensure that “all necessary measures” are taken to “avoid or limit these collisions.”
The law on animal welfare, adopted in March by the Spanish Parliament, in fact considers mistreatment inflicted on animals as a criminal offense, recalls this letter, consulted by AFP.
Among the solutions proposed by the associations is the installation of stickers or protective nets on transparent walls, making them visible. A technique successfully tested, according to SEO/Birdlife, in the Valencia region (East).
Created at the end of the 1960s in Mexico, padel – a derivative of tennis played in pairs on smaller courts lined with walls used for bouncing balls – is one of the sports which is currently experiencing the strongest growth in the world.
In Spain, this racket sport has become a real phenomenon in just a few years, with four million practicing it, or nearly 10% of the population. According to the Deloitte firm, the country now hosts 15,300 padel tracks, out of a total of 40,000 recorded in the world.