Dear friends,
My latest op ed essay has just been published by SciDev.Net, anchored in
London, UK:
Planet before profit for climate change films
http://www.scidev.net/en/opinions/planet-before-profit-for-climate-change-films.html
Films and television programmes about climate change should be
made freely available beyond their initial broadcast, argues Nalaka
Gunawardene. [full text pasted below]
This promotes the idea of copyrights-free circulation of TV programmes
and video films in the developing world, something which my organisation,
TVE Asia Pacific, is firmly committed to. We're already doing it in our
region: see
http://www.tveap.org/index.php
Warm regards - and apologies for any cross-posting.
Nalaka Gunawardene
* * * * *
http://www.scidev.net/en/opinions/planet-before-profit-for-climate-change-films.html
Planet before profit for climate change films
4 November 2008
Films and television programmes about climate change should be designated
a 'copyright free zone'.
This was the call made by broadcasters and independent film-makers at an
Asian media workshop held in Tokyo last month (October).
For years, broadcasters have dutifully reported on evolving scientific
and political aspects of climate change. They have also made or carried
excellent documentaries analysing causes of, and solutions to, the
problem. But these are often not widely available, because of tight
copyright restrictions.
Limited distribution
Most media companies hang on to their products for years, sometimes
long after they have recovered their full investment.
Even when film-makers or producers themselves want their creations to
circulate beyond broadcasts, company policies get in the way. In large
broadcast or film production companies, lawyers and accountants not
journalists or producers decide how and where content is distributed.
It isn't just climate-related films that are locked up with copyright
restrictions. Every year, hundreds of television programmes or video
films many supported by public, corporate or philanthropic funds are
made on a variety of development and conservation topics.
These are typically aired once, twice or at best a few times and then
relegated to a shelf somewhere. A few may be released on DVD or adapted
for online use. But the majority goes into archival 'black holes', from
where they might never emerge again.
Yet most of these films have a long shelf life and could serve multiple
secondary uses outside the broadcast industry.
Beyond broadcast
Communicating the need for social change is a slow, incremental
process. Broadcasts can flag important issues, but real engagement
happens in classrooms, training centres and other small groups where
screenings stir up deeper discussions. Combining broadcast and
'narrowcast' outreach vastly increases the chances of changing people's
attitudes and, ultimately, their behaviour.
But if moving images are to play a decisive role in the climate debate,
television programmes and video films on the subject need to be more
freely available, accessible and useable, as argued at the Tokyo
workshop.
One example is the 2006 documentary 'Climate in Crisis', co-produced by
Japan's public broadcaster NHK, along with The Science Channel and
ALTOMEDIA/France 5.
The film draws heavily on the Earth Simulator one of the world's most
powerful supercomputers, used to predict climate patterns over the next
century.
The results are both mind-boggling and alarming. In the coming decades,
atmospheric temperatures may rise by as much as 4.2 degrees Celsius. This
could lead to more frequent and intense hurricanes, spreading deserts and
significant loss of the Amazon rainforest. The documentary discusses
whether and how humankind can avoid these impacts, drawing on rigorous
scientific data.
Yet this hugely important film has not been widely seen, talked about or
distributed in Asia because of copyright restrictions. Only the highest
bidders are allowed to acquire it for hefty licence fees.
That is standard broadcast industry practice. Whatever the crisis and
however important the cause, most media companies and film-makers keep
tight control over copyrights. This is true even in the "majority
world" (the global South), where they are unlikely to make any money
from the films. Their policy: no fee, no see.
Making a difference
My organisation, TVE Asia Pacific, supplies hundreds of films about
development issues. Our non-profit service clears copyrights for top
television and video films and then distributes them to broadcast, civil
society and educational users in over two dozen developing countries in
Asia. We operate outside the crushing licence fee arrangements
copyright owners participate on a purely goodwill basis, allowing their
creations to be used far and wide for awareness, advocacy, education and
training purposes. End users pay only for copying and dispatch
costs.
Such secondary distribution does not change producers' balance sheets,
but it gives a whole new life to their films.
For example, when we supplied a television series called Climate
Challenge to Vietnam Television last year, it was the first time climate
change received in-depth coverage in Vietnam. It marked a turning point
in the country's public understanding of this issue.
This is particularly significant because a 2007 survey revealed low
levels of interest in climate issues in the Vietnamese media. The World
Bank lists Vietnam, with its 3,000 kilometre long coastline, as one of
the countries most vulnerable to climate change.
Profit or planetary survival?
Broadcast mandarins routinely support global struggles against
poverty, HIV, corruption and climate change by offering free airtime to
carry public interest messages. But few let go of their own products on
these very subjects for non-broadcast uses.
Making climate change a 'copyright free zone' for media products would
increase the resource materials available to thousands of educators,
social activists and trainers struggling to communicate this complex
topic to audiences across the world. Moving images would make their task
easier.
The climate crisis challenges everyone to adopt extraordinary measures.
Broadcasters and film-makers need to balance their financial interests
with planetary survival.
What use is intellectual property on a dead planet?
Nalaka Gunawardene is director of TVE Asia Pacific, a regional
non-profit media foundation. He blogs on media, society and development
at
http://movingimages.wordpress.com.