When corporations tout their greenness and journalists get beaten senseless by lame ideas.
Peter
Dykstra for the Environmental Health Network
I hope like me you're counting the hours till this Thursday, April 22, the 52nd observance of Earth Day.
An
American invention largely credited to U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson and student
activist Denis Hayes, Earth Day's 1970 debut drew millions of people to rallies
and events in big cities and small towns; grade schools, and college campuses.
This
is not to be confused with Earth Hour, which was observed this year at 8:30 pm
EDT on March 27, leaving the annual final score for the year: Earth = one hour;
everything else = 8,759 hours.
Earth
Day is also not to be confused with the United Nations' World Environment Day
coming up on June 5, or its World Oceans Day, three days after that.
After
its grand 1970 debut, Earth Day became a decidedly more mundane event until
1990. Several years of telegenic eco-disasters—the horrific chemical release in
Bhopal, India; the Chernobyl nuclear meltdown; the Exxon Valdez oil spill; and
more – re-ignited public passions.
As a major event, Earth Day 1990 stands alone as a high-profile environmental newsmaker (except, of course, for the disasters). A two-hour primetime ABC special drew A-list talent: Bette Midler, Danny DeVito, Dan Aykroyd, Chevy Chase, Bill Cosby, Kevin Costner, Rodney Dangerfield, Jane Fonda, Morgan Freeman, Dustin Hoffman, Magic Johnson, Jack Lemmon, Meryl Streep, Betty White, Robin Williams, and Barbra Streisand.
On
the corporate side, greenwashing— green public relations efforts meant to mask
polluting reality—started to increase in the 1980s and 1990s. Petrochemical
giant Chevron notably put the con in consummate, dropping
millions in greenwash print and video ads in its "People Do"
campaign. In this TV classic, the kindly
folk of Chevron keep desert critters from dying of thirst.
In
a 1988 print ad, Chevron dropped an estimated six figures bragging about its
efforts to save the endangered El Segundo Blue Butterfly. Unmentioned in the
ad: Chevron was initially mandated to save the butterfly because its habitat
was plowed under in part to build Chevron's massive El Segundo refinery complex.
Here
in 2021, Greenwashing lives, and it's slicker than ever. America's biggest soda
makers trotted out their biggest brands—Coke, Pepsi, and Dr. Pepper—to pledge
their fealty to plastics recycling, despite decades' worth of opposition to
bottle return legislation. Their ad ran during the Super Bowl of American
advertising, which is, of course the Super Bowl.
Heartless
journalists like me aren't blameless, either, as we annually turn our
cyber-backs on literally hundreds of press releases, story pitches, and videos
about how Snoopy (or was
it Snoop Dogg?) is spending Earth Day.
Of
course, not all of the news is cause to be cynical. President Biden has
scheduled a virtual summit of world leaders (on Earth Day, of course!) to
harden and accelerate commitments to reduce greenhouse emissions and affirm the
reversal of the past four years of White House science denial.
Make
no mistake: Earth Day, even with its shallowness and condescension, is a good
thing—as are Earth Hour, World Environment Day, World Oceans Day, and more.
Hopefulness?
By this time, I had hoped over 52 Earth Days that we had accomplished a little
bit more.
Peter
Dykstra is our weekend editor and columnist.
His
views do not necessarily represent those of Environmental Health News, The
Daily Climate, or publisher, Environmental Health Sciences.