The podcast discusses public opinion on climate change in the US and around the world, focusing on the 'Climate Change in the American Mind' report series. It covers the importance of effective communication and engagement, increasing concern about climate change in the 2024 election campaigns, challenges in messaging the Inflation Reduction Act, transitioning to a green economy and the role of fossil fuel workers, limitations of surveys, and mixed emotions about the future.
Public opinion on climate change in the US varies, with some feeling worried, frustrated, or hopeful.
Extreme weather events are important in changing people's views on climate change and attributing them to human influence.
There is a political divide on climate change in the US, with challenges in gaining Republican support and the need for better communication on climate policies.
Deep dives
Public Opinion on Climate Change
The podcast episode explores public opinion on climate change, focusing on the US. It discusses surveys conducted by the Yale program on climate change communication and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change to understand people's views on climate change. The surveys highlight how worried, frustrated, or hopeful people feel, and compare public opinion on climate change in the US to other countries. It emphasizes the importance of talking about climate change as a necessary condition for action.
Extreme Weather as a Teachable Moment
The episode highlights the role of extreme weather events as teachable moments for connecting the dots between climate change and its impacts. It mentions the growing influence of direct and vicarious experiences of extreme weather in changing people's views on climate change. The emergence of attribution science is also discussed, as it helps attribute extreme events to climate change, shifting the perception from natural disasters to unnatural disasters.
Political Divide on Climate Change
The podcast episode delves into the political divide on climate change in the US. It explores the different segments of the public categorized in surveys as alarmed, concerned, cautious, disengaged, doubtful, and dismissive. It highlights the disproportionate influence of the dismissive group in shaping public discourse on climate change. It also discusses the increasing importance of climate change as a priority among liberal Democrats and the challenges in gaining Republican support.
Communication and Awareness of Climate Policies
The episode examines the communication and awareness of climate policies, specifically focusing on the Inflation Reduction Act. It highlights the low public awareness of the act and the need for better communication to inform the public about its climate provisions. The importance of connecting individual policies to the broader goal of addressing climate change is emphasized. The episode also touches on the challenges of messaging and the need for quantity and quality in communication.
Transition to a Green Economy and Public Perception
The podcast episode discusses the challenges and complexities of transitioning to a green economy, particularly in terms of public perception and public sentiment about nuclear power. It raises the issue of uncertainty surrounding job opportunities and pay rates in a green economy and the need for a just transition. It also highlights the negative perceptions and associations that still exist around nuclear power, despite its potential in decarbonizing the energy sector.
As we move on from the hottest summer on record, climate change and its effects remain in the national zeitgeist. The topic has been featured in both Democratic and Republican presidential discussions. The Biden administration continues to advocate for the Inflation Reduction Act, which aims to fight climate change by cleaning up various pollution-heavy industries.
But politics are just one lens for looking at climate change. A series of surveys from the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and George Mason University’s Center for Climate Change study public opinion of climate change from different perspectives.
So, how worried, frustrated, or hopeful are people feeling about the climate crisis? What specifically do registered voters in America think about the issue? And how do those sentiments compare to other countries around the world?
This week host Bill Loveless talks with Anthony Leiserowitz about Yale’s and George Mason’s “Climate Change in the American Mind” report series, and beliefs held around the world.
Anthony is the founder and director of the Yale University Program on Climate Change Communication, and a senior research scientist at the Yale School of the Environment. He has worked with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the National Academy of Sciences, the World Economic Forum, and many other major organizations to understand the psychological, cultural, and political factors that shape climate change beliefs. In 2020, he was named one of the most influential climate scientists in the world by Reuters. Anthony also hosts “Climate Connections,’’a daily 90-second podcast about the climate crisis.
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