The hidden carbon cost of reality TV shows like The Traitors

Millions of us unwind with reality television. It’s comforting, social and, when the format is good, brilliantly engineered drama. But there’s an invisible carbon cost to all that escapism.

Plenty of attention has been paid to the carbon footprint of big Hollywood productions, but less so to unscripted TV. Yet the key emitters are similar: travel, energy and materials.

The British Film Institute’s Screen New Deal, a landmark 2020 report on the environmental impact of UK Film Production, found that an average tent-pole show (a high-budget feature that is expected to be a success) produces around 2,840 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e) during production. That’s roughly the annual absorption of more than 3,000 acres of forest, and the equivalent of 11 one-way trips to the Moon.

Interested and want to read more? Find the full article here…

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The Bafta film awards are going greener – but some climate problems are hiding off camera

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British Cinematographer: LIGHTING FOR BALANCE: FORGING A SUSTAINABLE CINEMATOGRAPHY PRACTICE