Sunday, October 14, 2012

Changing Public Perceptions of Climate Change

A new study from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and George Mason University was just released last week. It appears that "a large and growing number of Americans" believe that global warming is affecting weather in the United States. This number is up 5% since March of 2012--from 69% to 74%.

Further, Americans were more likely to connect global warming to record high temperatures this summer, Americans said that climate change had made events such as the severe drought that struck the Midwest this summer worse, and Americans increasingly say that weather in the U.S. has been getting worse over the past several years.

I believe that too often laws and regulations are the result of politics, not sound science. Nevertheless, the public's willingness to accept or reject new environmental controls and standards strongly affects what laws/regulations may ultimately come to pass. Traditionally the American public has trailed other developed countries in accepting climate change as a real phenomenon. If public perception is indeed changing, we may be on the cusp of policy changes as well.

The report itself is far too long for this little blog. However, if you are interested in reading more:Click Here

No comments:

Post a Comment