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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

CLIMATE CHANGE FATIGUE? COVERAGE DOWN AGAIN IN 2011 !




“It is easy to dodge our responsibilities, but we cannot dodge the consequences of dodging our responsibilities”. -- Josiah Stamp

Globally, are people getting less interested in talking about climate change? What might be the reasons for the seemingly less interest in climate change stories? Is there a feeling that enough has been said about climate change? Are people frustrated that they talk about climate change and yet see that nothing is happening? Is it to the benefit of the earth that we stop creating awareness of climate change and put pressure on ourselves to find solutions?

Last week, I had a discussion with a friend and we arrived at a conclusion that “climate change” is gradually fading away just as some words had become very topical some years ago and they gradually faded away. Our assertion was not backed by any real facts or analysis but we were convinced of what we said, basing our assertion on the frequency at which we are hearing and reading articles and editorials on climate change in the Ghanaian media. ‘Sustainability’, at some point, was the ‘catchword’ of every debate on the environment but this word gradually faded away; we will discuss this another time. Now, it seems climate change is gradually fading away too.

Then this week I come across a publication by DailyClimate.org that had the headline, ‘Climate coverage down again in 2011’. So we might be right with our assertion after all! In the article, it is stated that “media coverage of climate change continued to tumble in 2011, declining roughly 20% from 2010's levels and nearly 42 % from 2009's peak, according to analysis of DailyClimate.org's archive of global media”. Despite the many extreme weather events that occurred across the globe, famine in the Horn of Africa, Australia's approval of a carbon tax, COP 17 climate conference in South Africa, etc, coverage of climate change issues went down.

According to DailyClimate.org, at least 7,140 journalists and opinion writers published some 19,000 stories on climate change in 2011, compared to more than 11,100 reporters who filed 32,400 stories in 2009. Also, 20% fewer reporters covered the issue in 2011 than in 2010, 20% fewer outlets published stories, and the most prolific reporters on the climate change beat published 20% fewer stories. This information, in my opinion, is a wake-up call for all who are concerned to get back to work and write about this global challenge. We need to make more people aware of what is happening around us. Relentless efforts at creating public awareness of climate change issues which reached its peak in 2009 have helped to make the society more aware of the key issues in the problem. If media outlets and all writers would not relax but step up their game, some more minds would change to accept that climate change is real and there is the need to address it.

Climate-related issues published by the BBC in 2011, for instance, dropped by 30% from 2010, whilst ‘The New York Times’ published 953 stories and blog posts, against 1,116 in 2010 and 1,408 in 2009; according to dailyclimate.org. Reuters published 1,235 stories in 2011 – more than three per day – its output was down 27% from 2010. Looking at this reducing trend, it seems climate change is no longer ‘that new girlfriend’ that was found to be extremely attractive and one couldn’t stop talking about!

One important consideration if we want the reading public to attach importance to climate change issues: “CLIMATE CHANGE should be seen in banner headlines”. “People take their cues about what's important from what shows up in the headline of the newspaper. It doesn't matter really what the articles say," says Robert Brulle, Drexel University.

So I ask again, is there a lack of interest in talking about climate change? What might be the reasons for the seemingly less interest in climate change stories? Is there a feeling that enough has been said about climate change? Are people frustrated that they talk about climate change and yet see that nothing is happening? Is it to the benefit of the earth that we stop creating awareness of climate change and put pressure on ourselves to find solutions?

Let’s wake up!

“In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences”. -- Robert Green Ingersoll

5 comments:

  1. There is evidence everywhere for climate change. Even right here, where I am posting from. The dry season came one month early this year, the maize crop failed for everyone in my district. The glaciers in the Andes have almost completely disappeared. Portions of Antarctica are disappearing and the North Pole is thinning out. The northern United States was warm and dry on Christmas day. Methane gas is no bubbling up through ice in northern Siberia, an event that climatologists and geologists predicted a decade ago.

    I don't think people are ignoring climate change, I think people are demoralized because the world is having so many problems. We are not talking about climate change because we are talking about the collapse of the Euro, Syria, the Arab Spring, terrorism in Nigeria, the elections of 2012.

    As always, the rural farmer picks at the soil with his/her cutlass while the urban masses worry about their pockets. Nothing new, really. Bad timing, considering that the environment is changing at unprecedented levels.

    Some people say "where is God?" I say "where is humanity?"

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  2. Sure! Douglas, you have made a great point. Many things are competing for attention in a world overwhelmed with challenges. But I still encourage all of us not to give up, even in this state of affairs. We need to put on the pressure for all to act and save the situation.

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  3. We probably need to cautious interpretation of the trend. For instance, it is possible that the 2009 peak coincided with awareness of a "sizeable" population? Second, newspaper publications target urban residents principally because most rural people in many developing countries cannot read or cannot afford a newspaper. It is therefore perfectly possible that a reduction in publications is a "dont preach to the converts" phenomenon.

    Probably, a better question to explore is whether a slump in newspaper publications translates into a slump in climate change action, especially since most microlevel climate work occurs in rural communities which lack or dont rely on editorials etc.

    whichever way we look at it, a demise of climate change action, not necessarily rhetorics, will be charting a course of fatalism.

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  4. Interestingly, one thing I've noticed is that there seem to be more jobs in climate change this year than in years past. So perhaps universities and agencies are getting the message. Maybe the news accrues, rather than just seeping out of everyone's minds immediately.

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  5. Ken,
    I agree that generally, the newspapers get circulated more in the urban areas. But there aren't any newspapers, for example in Ghana, that are published in the rural areas targeting the rural audience so the few who read newspapers in the rural areas would still have to read the same papers as those in the urban areas. Moreover, most radio stations transmitting in the local languages which are widely listened by the rural folks, review the newspapers and it is what is published that gets to the rural folks. On the "dont preach to the converts" phenomenon, I think if writers adopt this attitude in reference to writing about climate change to the urban population, then we are making a mistake. There is nothing like too much education, in my opinion. Come to think of it, most of the urban population are not so educated on climate change issues as we may want to believe. ON "whether a slump in newspaper publications translates into a slump in climate change action", it is an issue worth investigating.

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