How it was told
We can’t get enough of barbecues. A mere crack of sunlight peeking through the clouds is enough for us to fire up the grill, even if the Great British Summer™ has other ideas and the burgers and bangers end up getting cooked on the hob once the inevitable rain arrives.
And the outlook for barbecues wasn’t sunny in the news last week either after the publication of a study that set out to measure their environmental impact.
The research, carried out by scientists from the N8 AgriFood programme, which brings together eight universities from the north of England, was reported in different ways by different publications.
Take The Sun’s report, for example, which went for: “OH BURGER Barbecues create almost as much air pollution as 100-mile car trips, scientists claim.”
As for The Daily Telegraph, it opted for: “Family barbecue as harmful to planet as 90-mile car journey, unless you cut out the red meat” while Mail Online shared the 90-mile assessment with: “Just ONE barbecue causes as much pollution as a 90-mile car journey, scientists reveal.”
As for the i, it went for 80 miles and the well-known measurement of party balloons in: “Why having a bbq is worse for the environment than driving and releases enough carbon dioxide to ‘fill 60 party balloons’.”