4.3 Article

Biochar in the British print news media: an analysis of promissory discourse and the creation of expectations about carbon removal

Journal

SCIENCE AS CULTURE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09505431.2023.2285057

Keywords

Biochar; greenhouse gas removal; media; promissory discourse; rhetorical analysis; hyberbole

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Mass-media reporting plays a crucial role in raising public awareness and shaping expectations about the risks and benefits of biochar. The use of rhetorical strategies in these reports promotes biochar as a magical solution while downplaying its potential drawbacks, therefore presenting it as a moral good that the public should accept without questioning.
Biochar is amongst a growing suite of approaches developed to address the climate crisis by removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere; yet public awareness of biochar is low. In this situation, mass-media reporting plays an important role in making an issue public and in creating expectations about its risks and benefits. In British broadsheet newspapers, a promissory, future-oriented discourse on biochar has emerged that is rhetorically configured through, for example, evaluative adjectives, verbs, hyperbole, and allusions to literary and cultural symbols that confer a sense of mystique. Biochar is promoted as an almost magical fix, based on its ability to soak up and store carbon, improve soil health, increase crops yields, and reduce pollutants. Conversely, some of the possible negative aspects of biochar are couched in the form of sarcasm and parody, while others are made invisible. This sets biochar up as a moral good that the public ought to accept, rather than opening up a public debate about its risks and benefits. Engaging in a fine-grained rhetorical analysis of the way promises about biochar are constructed expands the methodological and empirical repertoire of the sociology of expectations and, in future, can be applied to the analysis of other emerging climate change technologies, especially those relating to carbon removal.

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