Covering Climate Now launches training for local TV reporters
The group, which now claims 600 journalists and media shops with a mixed viewers of greater than two billion folks, claims they’re assembly public demand.
A new study by the Yale Program on Local weather Change Communication says 56% of Individuals are “involved” or “alarmed” about local weather change. CCNow calls the ballot “important studying for US journalists specifically in an election 12 months.”
One way or the other Anthony Leiserowitz, the director of the Yale program, informed CCNow the share is “really a lot increased,” on the idea folks unconcerned about local weather change nonetheless “wish to be taught extra concerning the causes, penalties and options to local weather change.”
“Solely the 11% of the general public that also denies local weather change doesn’t need extra data,” CCNow inferred.
Individuals don’t get it, CCNow complains.
“Separate surveys present that many Individuals don’t acknowledge that burning oil, fuel, and coal is the primary reason for local weather change, underscoring the significance of constructing that connection in information protection,” the group mentioned.
Yale has been polling on the matter since its 2009 Six Americas examine which recognized six classes of pondering among the many public: “alarmed,” “involved,” “cautious,” “disengaged,” “uncertain,” and “dismissive.” Since 2013, the share of “alarmed” Individuals has greater than doubled, whereas the share who’re both “alarmed” or “involved” jumped from 40% to at the moment’s 56%. The “dismissive”, which CCNow calls “deniers” has remained secure at 11%.
Sarcastically, the CCNow article explains that journalists must be tempered within the significance they connect to polls. As a result of they’re solely snapshots, “reporters and pundits [should be] rather more cautious about drawing conclusions about what at the moment’s polls imply about elections which are, within the US, nonetheless 11 months away.”
Leiserowitz mentioned the alarmed prioritize local weather change as a voting problem, and the involved are much less prone to have local weather change amongst their prime poll issues.
“The 2024 elections — not solely within the US however many different climate-critical nations, together with India, Pakistan, Indonesia, throughout the European Union, the UK, South Africa, and Mexico — will probably be a prime precedence for Protecting Local weather Now this 12 months,” CCNow explains.
“Keep tuned for additional details about the way you and your newsroom may be concerned — and don’t hesitate to electronic mail us your individual concepts.”
In a postscript, CCNow pointed to a “noteworthy” story from Grist: . It claimed that 2023 was the most popular 12 months prior to now 125,000.
The article celebrated the American Local weather Corps, a Biden-administration funded group of 20,000 18-to-26-year-olds. The group, which will probably be paid, will set up photo voltaic initiatives, mitigate wildfire danger, and make houses extra energy-efficient. Grist mentioned the initiative was considered by the precise as a authorities make-work waste of funds, whereas the left complains about low wages are for the corps.