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The counter-intuitive solution to getting people to care about climate change

The counter-intuitive solution to getting people to care about climate change
Zero-emissions energy is part of the solution to climate change. Credit:

In a May episode of Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, Bill Nye the Science Guy took a . It was an effort to startle Americans out of their complacency over climate change.

Whether on late-night TV or the nightly news, alarm is a recurring feature of stories. Climate news is full of references to worsening wildfires, melting glaciers and rising seas.

However, this emphasis on doom and gloom can leave citizens feeling helpless and hopeless that they can make a difference.

"Threatening messages can capture the public's attention and create a sense of urgency, leading to a heightened level of concern," Climate Access, a non-profit research group. "But worry by itself is not an effective motivator for action, as it more often leads to resignation and hopelessness."

Rethinking climate coverage

One approach that can better engage news audiences is a style of reporting known as solutions journalism.

Solutions journalism is reporting on ways that people and governments meaningfully respond to difficult problems. It is an alternative to just reporting on the problem itself.

Solutions stories are not fluffy, good news stories. Instead, they are hard news stories meant to highlight based on tangible proof.

The approach to increase interest in a subject, and to elevate the public's sense of self-efficacy.

‘Green New Deal,’ Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO). The segment with Bill Nye begins at 18:20.

More facts ≠ more concern

No subject is arguably more timely for a solutions-oriented approach right now than change. The evidence could not be more clear. The planet has heated up steadily since the Industrial Revolution. has happened over the past four decades.

Despite all the evidence, mustering the political will to take climate change more seriously is a persistent problem. Why is that?

There are why politicians and the public have difficulty engaging with climate change. For example, climate change can feel distant, and there is often little immediate gratification for dealing with it.

Unfortunately, academics, governments and journalists have long assumed that citizens would take action .

However, there is growing evidence that more facts do not translate into more concern. In a , Dan Kahan, a professor of law and psychology at Yale Law School, and his colleagues found that people who had more knowledge about the science of climate change were not necessarily more concerned about it. Instead, lack of concern had much more to do with people's personal beliefs and values.

Effective climate communication

Effective climate change communication challenges the idea that more facts produce more concern. Instead, effective climate change communication considers that tapping into is a far more effective strategy for engagement.

Good climate communicators ask the question: what is it about people's experiences and circumstances that make them unlikely to engage with the climate crisis right now?

The counter-intuitive solution to getting people to care about climate change
The Earth’s average global temperature from 2013 to 2017, as compared to a baseline average from 1951 to 1980. Yellows, oranges and reds show regions that are warmer than the baseline. Credit: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio

Effective climate communication also begins with the premise that climate audiences are , equally interested or disinterested in the climate crisis. Good climate communication calibrates messages of hope or alarm the messages are being communicated to.

Engaging by example

Solutions-oriented journalism on climate change provides examples of how . It illustrates how those changes are having a tangible, beneficial improvement on their lives.

For instance, climate stories can reflect locally sourced food and its health impacts, or the cost savings on gas from buying an electric vehicle.

This style is markedly different from the conventional doom-and-gloom approach to climate reporting, which builds on the standard of . Instead, a solutions-oriented approach to climate news underscores the importance of and political mobilization.

Climate as crisis

There is also an important role in environmental communication for what Steve Schwarze, a University of Montana communication studies professor, refers to as "."

Highly dramatic accounts of personal or political struggle are typically associated with the oversimplification of complex problems. But melodrama can also produce "productive forms of polarization," according to Schwarze. For example, melodrama can galvanize a group of citizens around a common cause, or it can be deployed to point out who the villains in the story are.

It's becoming increasingly clear that a one-size-fits-all approach to climate change is not sufficient for engaging news audiences.

Instead, effectively engaging the public on climate change requires a framed around solutions, the urgency of the climate crisis and individuals' reasons for engaging or not engaging with the subject in the first place.

Provided by The Conversation

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