Events

Past Event

“Natural Pollutants” and Environmental Agnotology

November 4, 2021
12:15 PM - 1:30 PM
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Online

Event Information

For much of the twentieth century, “pollution” referred to the release of substances that caused direct harm to the environment. It described a form of environmental contamination. But in the 1970s, scientists became attuned to a kind of pollution whose effects only materialized indirectly, by threatening to alter the environmental conditions like the climate and the ozone layer that humans relied on to survive. This new pollution—diffuse and invisible, and not immediately linked to a single emissions source—became the framework for a new genre of environmental agnotology on the part of the petrochemical industry: it made it possible to contest the assumption that the changes were necessarily anthropogenic in origin. And so, in response to mounting evidence that commercial products like CFCs and fossil fuels were causing large-scale changes in the form of ozone holes, acid rain, and climate change, the petrochemical industry pursued an alternative explanation: that the changes were caused by pollutants with natural, nonhuman origins. This talk considers the history of the “natural pollutants” concept as it related to the 1970s-era disinformation campaigns of the petrochemical industry and explores how the concept blurred the line between good-faith scientific research and industry diversionary strategy. It draws from a larger research project on the political uses of environmental knowledge in the late-twentieth century United States.

Event Speakers

Please visit the event webpage to view the full speaker list. 

Event Information

Free and open to the public; registration required for virtual and in-person attendees. For more information, please visit the event webpage.

Columbia affiliates are allowed to attend the event in person if they meet all Columbia University compliance measures. The event will take place at the Heyman Center (Second Floor Common Room). Please visit the Heyman’s Center website for directions

Hosted by the Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University.