It all depends on the Egg coloring DNA of each parent bird that make your F1 cross. First off Earlobe color and comb type do not equal egg color. It just happens to be that we humans have bred most brown layers (but not all brown layers) to have red earlobes and most white egg layers to have white earlobes for instance, but you can easily have red earlobe hen that lays white eggs or a white earlobe bird that lays brown. Pea Comb is DNA strand wise is near the gene that creates blue eggs but does not determine egg colour, that is why there are Straight Comb birds that lay Blue/Green Eggs. On top of all that there are genes that block the browning genes you need to get green, so if a bird has that you will get either blue or white eggs even if the bird is caring the brown genes, but in theory a few generations removed of only crossing descendants of the F1's you could have a brown/green layer pop up as all the recessive brown egg genes are hiding in the DNA. Avoid the Leghorn breeds they carry this gene for blocking brown genes if you want green eggs. So in theory you could breed any comb type you want and also breed for egg colour, also you could breed for a specific earlobe color, and many other traits. Now Pea Comb is dominant over Straight Comb so if both parents are PP you will have all Pea Comb chicks in the F1 generation regardless of what colour genes they carry for eggs, but if one bird is Straight and one Pea Comb in the F2 generations you should get a few Straight Combs but until they lay or you test the roos you have no idea for sure what DNA each bird carries for egg colour. The only way to know for sure what a hen will lay is to see it, and the only way to see a roos DNA is to breed him to a hen you know the DNA of and then see what his daughters lay. Shinny Egg gene makes your eggs look darker in my opinion.
The more traits you breed for the more complicated your breeding becomes. Now some Comb types affect fertility, others create bigger nostrils, some help the birds cool down in heat, some are more susceptible to frost bite, or can help a roo in chicken society. Most Combs we humans breed for is because we thought it looked cool or made the birds more attractive or prevented a health problem. In theory if you understand the Comb DNA you can breed for a specific comb type and egg colour the same as some people breed for egg colour and feather colour.
What Comb type do you want to breed for?
There are at least 13 genes that affect the browning colour of eggs. There is a dominant gene that blocks browning and a recessive gene as well, so those are 2 genes you want to weed out of any Green Egg breeding program.
If you like wattles on your birds for instance the Pea Comb has to go as it causes the wattles to go bye bye. So what I am getting at is you can breed for different traits but you have to understand what those traits do to other traits you may want or not want, Pea Comb causes a dew lap for instance, thus if you don't want a dew lap you must breed for a comb type that does not have Pea Comb genes. A real example in futility: the Silkie Standard about a Walnut Comb with big Wattles for Beardless Silkies is an impossible genetics... Walnut is created by Pea Comb Genes, in time no doubt DNA reality will change the Standard. Silkies used to have a type of Rose comb, then Walnut became the standard but who ever wrote it didn't understand wattles go bye bye with Pea Comb DNA, so down the road after a lot of arguing no doubt the Beardless Silkie Standard will hopefully get changed to something genetically possible, the same thing happens to dog breed standards too. (sigh) People write standards sometimes that sound good but are not genetically possible because the DNA was not understood properly at the time.

Hope that helps.