Categories
Podcasts

Podcast review: Rebecca John, Deceptive PR Strategy Pioneered in 1950s California to Hide Climate Change Risk

I am going to start doing reviews of climate change podcasts that touch on the long gory history (especially pre-1988). If you have recommendations, get in touch. The first review is positive (yay). Rebecca John appearing on the History of California Podcast to talk about research she did about the “Air Pollution Foundation” – an early 1950s oil-industry funded group that (spoilers) hired a young Charles Keeling to measure the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Tl; dr – good questions, comprehensive but not verbose answers, and some methodological nuggets for the history geeks; what’s not to love?

The review

History of California Podcast

The History of California podcast looks really good. I’ve only listened to one episode (so far), and it was even better than really good. And it’s an interview with Rebecca John who has done lots of award winning documentaries, etc, and has been fossicking in the archives for what we knew about climate change when. “we” meaning the elites, not just the scientists. This is, of course, All Our Yesterday’s jam.

John is being interviewed here about one particular article published in January of 2024 about how the oil and gas companies were funding something called the air pollution foundation in 1953 54 in Los Angeles, and how that foundation funded the first carbon dioxide measurement work of Charles Keeling, who has neglected to mention it in his memoir.

This is what you want from a podcast. The questions are both on point and to the point, the answers are comprehensive without being train- spottery. And there’s some, you know, fun methodological facts. I totally recognize that you’re sitting in an archive, and you read some phrase, and you think, “hello?”, and then you pull on that bit of string and kapow. Well, it’s takes hard work, obviously.

So have a listen, and I’ll certainly be checking up more of the history of California podcast 

Two final things.

John has a really interesting news piece on DeSmog that begins thus

An Israeli private investigator wanted by U.S. authorities for allegedly carrying out a hack-and-leak operation commissioned on behalf of ExxonMobil is fighting against his extradition to a Brooklyn, NY, detention center. 

Also thanks to John’s shout out at the end, I found the specific files on Inside Climate News about Exon “the path not taken.” That led me to a trove of materials, including the one I just put up, from January 29, 1980, which is going viral (by my standards) at the moment.


Next podcast review – Alice Bell as a guest on The Cursed Object.

See also Green and Red podcast (haven’t watched yet)

Categories
United States of America

January 13, 1965 – President Lyndon Johnson gets a memo about carbon dioxide build-up and climate change

Sixty years ago, on this day, January 13, 1965, Lyndon Johnson got a memo about environmental problems, including carbon dioxie buildup. We know this thanks to the sterling investigative work of Rebecca John, writing for DeSmog. 

The amount of carbon dioxide in the air was roughly 320ppm. As of 2025 it is 425ppm, but check here for daily measures. 

The context was that US scientists, including Roger Revelle and Charles Dave Keeling had been measuring and pondering. A couple of years before this  memo, in March 1963 the Rockefeller-funded Conservation Foundation had held a meeting on carbon dioxide build-up.  The following year Revelle had chaired a group looking at environmental problems (the group included Margaret Mead!).  

What I think we can learn from this is that the information was getting to the very top quite quickly.

What happened next

A month after the memo, LBJ gave a special address to Congress on environmental problems included a mention of C02 build up

Two years to the day later an editorial appeared in Science pointing to … carbon dioxide as a problem

What do you think? Does this pass the ‘so what?’ threshold? Have I got facts wrong? Interpretation wrong? Please do comment on this post, unless you are a denialist, obvs.

Also on this day: 

January 13, 2004 – Bob Carr rallies states for emissions trading

January 13, 2005- UN Secretary-General calls for “decisive measures” on climate change

January 13, 2021 – New Scientist reports on types of intelligence required to deal with #climate change