Beyond the Headlines

CURWOOD: Well, the mockingbird sounds a particularly appropriate note for our trip beyond the headlines today with Peter Dykstra. He's the publisher of Daily Climate.org and Environmental Health News – EHN.org. – and joins us on the line from Conyers, Georgia. Hi there, Peter. DYKSTRA: Hi Steve. You know, its a grand time of year for folks like me because April Fools Day is upon us, and one of the best parts of April Fools Day are those things that sound like hoaxes and pranks, but they turn out to be true. So remember, everything Im about to tell you actually happened. CURWOOD: Even if it sounds like it didnt, huh? DYKSTRA: Right. One of my favorites happened six years ago, when NASCAR went carbon neutral. Back in 2008, they designated one single Saturday race as contributing no net gain of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere because they paid a conservation group to plant 4,200 carbon-eating trees. CURWOOD: And they said that offset the NASCAR race? DYKSTRA: Not just the NASCAR race, but the 100,000 plus spectators who came to the race. All that, they said, can be neutralized by planting what amounts to six acres worth of forest. But theres a little math problem here. The Michigan International Speedway, where this carbon neutral race occurred – if you take the grandstand, the track, the infield, the parking lot – its 1,100 acres of what at one time was a forest. CURWOOD: Yes, youre right about the math problem here. Im trying to figure this out. Lets see…one green race a year…six acres…so they could reforest an area the size of the racetrack in about 250 years. DYKSTRA: Ah, close. It would actually be 233 years, so theyd be all done by the year 2247. American Spirit sells Organic cigarettes (photo: Flickr user ATIS547, creative commons 2.0) CURWOOD: Now, Peter, youre not saying that carbon offsets are a bad thing, are you? DYKSTRA: No, not at all. Carbon offsets, when theyre practiced regularly, when theyre practiced on a widespread basis, can be a major part of dealing with climate change, but you dont get to claim credit for a bright green glow just by planting six acres worth of trees, once. Sometimes, embracing a term like carbon neutral or carbon offsets can be empty gestures that do more for your marketing department than it does to help your planet. CURWOOD: Whats up next? DYKSTRA: This ones been around for about 20 years, but it never ceases to amazes me. The American Spirit Tobacco has a special marketing niche of its own they sell organic tobacco that is free of pesticides. CURWOOD: But its still tobacco DYKSTRA: Its still tobacco, and not only does it carry the standard Surgeon Generals warning, but their website also has another warning that reads, No additives in our tobacco does NOT mean a safer cigarette. CURWOOD: So you can still get cancer from pesticide-free cigarettes, but thank heavens it wont be from the pesticides. DYKSTRA: Yeah, its like saying, Just shoot me. But please dont use lead shot. CURWOOD: OK. What about one more? DYKSTRA: Well this ones also an oldie-but-goodie, it comes from 1990. Its one of the first occasions when global governments got together to discuss and plan for climate change. One of the U.S. delegates was Julian R. Spradley, he was an attorney and lobbyist. Mr. Spradley got into a discussion with the Bangladeshi delegation, who had somehow gotten the impression that the United States wasnt taking climate change seriously enough, so Mr. Spradley summoned up his best diplomatic instincts to calm the Bangladeshis fears about climate change. He said, as quoted by the Washington Post: The situation is not a disaster, it is merely a change. The area won't have disappeared, it will just be underwater. Where you now have cows, you will have fish. CURWOOD: Well, Im sure he thought that was fine with the 150 million plus Bangladeshis. And Peter, youre promising us that all these things really did happen? DYKSTRA: Yes. As James Thurber said, you can look it up. CURWOOD: Well, you can look all of this up on our website, thats LOE.org. Peter Dykstra is publisher of the Environmental Health News and the DailyClimate.org. Thanks so much, Peter. DYKSTRA: Thanks a lot, Steve. Talk to you soon.

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