Few Americans are willing to ride public transit. Fewer still are willing to give up their cars. So that means our wear-and-tear on the environment will mostly likely be felt through the kind of car we drive. Rebecca Williams drives a 1989 Toyota with 188,000 miles on it. "Pieces of plastic trim fly off when I drive down the highway," she says. But that's not the worst of it. Her beater leaks oil. A lot of oil. Williams has to add one quart of oil every two weeks to keep the junker rolling down the road. So what's the environmental impact of that? That's the point of this piece. Williams checks with her mechanic and then a few scientists. It's a great journey and a pretty darn good story because it is something most listeners can relate to. If they ain't driving a junker now, chances are they did at one time. And my God, the environmental consequences of that are more than just an inconvenient truth, they are expensive to remedy.
The great thing about this piece is the way Rebecca Williams uses her personal experience to catalyze a discussion of a news-y topic. In fact, her personal perspective brings out an aspect of the topic (automobile pollution) that would otherwise have been hidden--the economic impact of pollution prevention on individual consumers.
It's a snappy, tight story, without any extra baggage. The ending is particularly smart, as Rebecca makes the story personal for the listener as well.
Comments for How Long Do You Keep a Polluting Heap?
This piece belongs to the series "Your Choice; Your Planet series"
Produced by Rebecca Williams
Other pieces by The Environment Report
Rating Summary
3 comments
Todd Melby
Posted on July 26, 2006 at 06:13 AM | Permalink
Review of How Long Do You Keep a Polluting Heap?
Few Americans are willing to ride public transit. Fewer still are willing to give up their cars. So that means our wear-and-tear on the environment will mostly likely be felt through the kind of car we drive. Rebecca Williams drives a 1989 Toyota with 188,000 miles on it. "Pieces of plastic trim fly off when I drive down the highway," she says. But that's not the worst of it. Her beater leaks oil. A lot of oil. Williams has to add one quart of oil every two weeks to keep the junker rolling down the road. So what's the environmental impact of that? That's the point of this piece. Williams checks with her mechanic and then a few scientists. It's a great journey and a pretty darn good story because it is something most listeners can relate to. If they ain't driving a junker now, chances are they did at one time. And my God, the environmental consequences of that are more than just an inconvenient truth, they are expensive to remedy.
Michael Flaxman
Posted on January 01, 2006 at 08:52 AM | Permalink
Review of How Long Do You Keep a Polluting Heap?
A personal take on environment and economics.
Thoughtful, fun and well researched - uses personal experience to explore a serious issue. The kind of story I count on NPR to bring forward.
Jenny Asarnow
Posted on February 17, 2005 at 04:54 PM | Permalink
Review of How Long Do You Keep a Polluting Heap?
The great thing about this piece is the way Rebecca Williams uses her personal experience to catalyze a discussion of a news-y topic. In fact, her personal perspective brings out an aspect of the topic (automobile pollution) that would otherwise have been hidden--the economic impact of pollution prevention on individual consumers.
It's a snappy, tight story, without any extra baggage. The ending is particularly smart, as Rebecca makes the story personal for the listener as well.