Why the public still struggles to believe in climate change; Latest statistics

<span property="schema:name">Why the public still struggles to believe in climate change; Latest statistics</span>
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Why the public still struggles to believe in climate change; Latest statistics

    • Author Name
      Sarah Laframboise
    • Author Twitter Handle
      @slaframboise14

    Full story (ONLY use the 'Paste From Word' button to safely copy and paste text from a Word doc)

    Take a look around you. It's increasingly obvious that the world is in a state of confusion when it comes to an opinion on the topic of climate change. Despite the numerous scientific organizations and scientists that have continually proven its existence, many world leaders and citizens still deny its evidence. Various studies have been conducted to gain the publics opinion on the idea of climate change.

    The Statistics

    In a recent survey performed by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, 70 per cent of Americans believe that global warming is occurring. This is surprisingly high considering the views of their elected president. The study also showed that 72 per cent of American trusted climate scientists about climate change. But only 49 per cent of people actually thought that scientists believe global warming is happening. However, Nasa released a study proving that 97 per cent of scientists believe it is happening. This indicates a dissociation between the public and their trust in science.

    Alarmingly, only 40 per cent of Americans believed that global warming would affect them personally, but 70 per cent thought that it would affect future generations, 69 per cent believed it would affect plants and animals, and 63 per cent believed it would affect Third World Countries. This indicates that people are choosing to dissociate themselves from a problem that they believe to be is true.

    But why are we dissociating ourselves from a problem that requires our immediate attention? Psychologist Sander van der Linden of Princeton University stated that: “Our brains are equipped with a biologically hard-wired alarm system that motivates responses to immediate environmental threats. The problem is that because we cannot readily see, hear, or experience the risk of climate change, this affective warning system is not activated.”

    In the UK, 64 per cent of people surveyed in a poll containing 2,045 people, stated they believed that climate change is happening and is due to human activity, and only four per cent stating that it was not occurring at all. This is a five per cent increase since their 2015 study.

    “Over just three years there has been a discernible shift in public opinion towards acceptance that climate change is both happening and mainly caused by human activity,” says ComRes chairman Andrew Hawkins 

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