Publications and Reports

Climate Change in the American Mind

Global Warming's Six Americas

The public plays a crucial role in the American response to global warming, through their energy use at home and on the road, consumer choices, social norms, and political support for climate policies and leaders. This project: 1) investigates, explains and tracks public understanding of the causes, consequences, and solutions to climate change, support for climate policies, and the current barriers to action, 2) designs and tests new strategies to engage the public in climate science and solutions.

We are constructing a nationally representative online panel of up to 12,000 American adults and 3,000 teenagers. To date, the project has:

  1. Identified six "Americas" within the United States that each respond to climate change in a different way and require tailored climate change education and communications.
  2. Constructed an unprecedented climate change communication research instrument to empirically test the messages and messengers that best resonate with and engage these different audiences.
  3. Advanced our understanding of the key psychological, cultural, and political drivers of American climate change attitudes, policy preferences, and behaviors.
  4. Produced actionable results vital to the design of effective climate change education and communication campaigns conducted by local, state, and national governments, environmental organizations, academic institutions, businesses, faith groups, doctors and scientists, and the media.

State and Local Surveys

Florida: a representative survey study of public responses to climate change in the state of Florida. Click here for Florida results.

Alaska: a representative survey study of public responses to climate change in the state of Alaska. Click here for Alaska results.

New York City: the first-ever in-depth study of public climate change risk perceptions, policy preferences, and behaviors in a major urban center – New York City. Click here for NYC results.

Local Policy Support: recent national surveys demonstrate that Americans are increasingly convinced that global warming is occurring and favor a wide range of national and international policies to slow it. We currently have almost no understanding, however, about public support for action on global warming by cities and local governments. Yet cities and local governments are critical players, as most of the greenhouse gases contributing to global warming come from urban areas. Building codes, zoning, transportation systems, and electricity production are all examples of critical choices made at the local level, with large consequences on greenhouse gas emissions. This survey was the first to measure public support for a variety of local climate change policies. Two national telephone surveys of Americans, ages 18 and over, were conducted from September 21-23 (n=1,004) and September 28-30, 2007 (n=1,005) in collaboration with GfK Roper. Click here for results.

The Climate Literacy Project

A national survey assessment of adult and 6-12 grade students’ understanding of the climate system and the causes, consequences, and potential solutions to climate change. This project is providing essential knowledge for climate change educators across the United States and an evaluation tool for educators to assess and track improvements in climate literacy among students and public audiences. Several reports have been published:

Americans' Knowledge of Climate Change

Knowledge of Climate Change Across Global Warming's Six Americas

American Teens' Knowledge of Climate Change

Knowledge of Climate Change Among Visitors to Science & Technology Centers

Climate Change in the American Mind in November, 2008 |  Yale Project on Climate Change Communication

Publications and Reports

Climate Change in the American Mind in November, 2008

In October and November of 2008 a research team from Yale and George Mason Universities conducted a nationally representative survey of 2,164 American adults. Survey participants were asked about their issue priorities for the new administration and Congress, support and opposition regarding climate change and energy policies, levels of political and consumer activism, and beliefs about the reality and risks of global warming.  Overall, the survey found that concerns about the economy dwarfed all other issues: 76 percent of Americans said that the economy was a “very high” priority. Global warming ranked 10th out of 11 national issues; nonetheless it remains a high or very high national priority for a majority of Americans. In addition, 72 percent of Americans said that the issue of global warming is important to them personally.

In line with these concerns, large majorities of Americans said that everyone - companies, political leaders at all levels of government, and individual citizens - should do more to reduce global warming. Likewise, despite the economic crisis, over 90 percent of Americans said that the United States should act to reduce global warming, even if it has economic costs. This included 34 percent who said the U.S. should make a large-scale effort, even if it has large economic costs.  
 
Americans strongly supported unilateral action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions: 67% said the United States should reduce its emissions of greenhouse gases, regardless of what other countries do, while only 7 percent said we should act only if other industrialized and developing countries (such as China, India, and Brazil) reduce their emissions.
 

Read more in the report.  

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