Greening the Media review: Sharp diagnosis, weak solutions

April 22, 2013
Issue 

Greening The Media
Richard Maxwell & Toby Miller
Oxford University Press, 2012
246 pages, $44.80 (pb)

There is a reason why the typical electronic product warranty lasts only 12 months, say Richard Maxwell and Toby Miller in Greening the Media.

Most digital devices are designed to “break or become uncool” after just a year, requiring regular product replacements or upgrades.

The profits of the big electronic brand names (Apple, Nintendo, Sony, Amazon, Microsoft, eBay, Motorola, Philips, Samsung, Toshiba, etc) depend on this business model of “rapid and planned cycles of innovation and obsolescence”.

In the process, this swiftly-changing technological fashion season “consumes, despoils and wastes natural resources”, with attendant toxic risks for the makers, users and disposers of this allegedly green, post-industrial technology. It happens on a scale that rivals the old smokestack factories of industrial capitalism.

The “clean and green” facade of today’s information and communication technologies and consumer electronics hides their insidious ecological impact.

Computers, printers, mobile phones, data servers, televisions and other screen-based gadgets account for 3% of global greenhouse gases throughout their life cycle, as large a climate footprint as carbon-dirty global aviation.

Google’s data server in Oregon, for example, uses the same amount of electricity as a city of 200,000, and total global data server electricity consumption doubles every five years, billowing carbon at huge, but invisible, rates.

Digital flat screen televisions, with their higher resolution and slim profile, can use three times the electricity of their cathode ray tube forebears.

Reading online for 30 minutes has the same environmental cost of the printing of one newspaper. At current growth rates, electricity consumption by all electronic equipment is projected to rise to almost half of total global electricity demand by 2030.

Microchip production also exacts a poisonous toll, through gases, acids, solvents and other chemicals (a mobile phone contains 200 chemical compounds), on the planet’s people.

Behind the stylish First World brand name lie the poisoned Third World workers of the offshore totalitarian manufacturers. They are contracted to gain competitive advantage by seeking out low-cost countries where “state incentives, weak labour organisation and protection, minimal environmental regulation, favourable exchange rates, low wages and sparse human rights enforcement” make for fatter First World profits.

Additional injury results from e-waste disposal, 50 million tons of it every year, mostly discarded mobile phones (130 million trashed annually in the US alone), televisions and computers.

To avoid the profit-harming higher costs and regulatory oversight of recycling in wealthier countries, over 80% of e-waste is exported to Asian, African and Latin American sites, dumping regions where pre-teen girls recycle the junked goods.

“Recycle” is a misnomer as just the valuable metals like copper are salvaged while the electronic carcass is dumped in landfill with toxic chemicals and heavy metals contaminating agricultural land and saturating the food chain.

The authors’ diagnosis is acute ― profit maximisation through unremitting growth in consumption is the engine of capitalism, both post-industrial and industrial, which rides roughshod over the human and natural world. But their prescription (not helped in its persuasiveness by an overdose of academic “media studies” theory) veers towards the fantasy of how a “radically reconfigured notion of environmental accountancy and auditing … can imagine a transformative role for markets in a future of environmentally sustainable media industries”.

Their vanguard of green but market-constrained accountants are valiant but doomed in their quest to fit the square peg of ecological sustainability into the round hole of capitalist growth.

The authors’ sincerity, however, for examining media technology “with an approach predicated on a deep regard for workers and the Earth and an equally profound disregard for technological hype” remains undimmed.

But, if the capitalist market can’t honour these values, then the vital industry of information and communication should be socialised and put in the hands of the world’s digital citizens.


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