Monday, July 27, 2020

Opposing climate change action gets more news coverage

A man has many newspapers projected on his face as he lays with his eyes closed

When organizations take a stand against actions to combat climate change, they get more news coverage than their pro-climate action peers, according to the study.

“The media is providing a distorted picture of how different groups feel on this issue.”

Rachel Wetts, an assistant professor in Brown University’s sociology department who is affiliated with the Institute at Brown for Environment and Society, looked at nearly three decades of climate change-related press releases and national news articles.

Approximately 14% of press releases opposing climate action or denying the science behind climate change received major national news coverage, she found, compared to about 7% of press releases with pro-climate action messages.

Wetts’ findings could help explain why Americans seem less concerned about the looming threat of climate change than their peers in other Western countries, she says, and why climate change policymaking in the US is so often stalled.

“When you ask Americans what issues they care about most, climate change and the environment are always far down on the list,” Wetts says. “The way climate change has been covered in the media could help us understand why there’s so much public disengagement on this issue.”

Wetts began the study, she says, in an effort to understand the extent to which mainstream media coverage might factor into national perceptions on climate change.

To start, she evaluated and categorized thousands of press releases from businesses, advocacy organizations, scientific researchers, trade organizations and the public sector, published between 1985 and 2013, to determine whether the releases supported or opposed climate action. Then, she used plagiarism-detection software to scan the content of all newspaper articles published about climate change in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and USA Today—the three largest-circulation newspapers in the US—in order to determine how many of the press releases had received coverage.

“The views of large businesses and opponents of climate action are being given an outsize opportunity to sway this debate.”

While just 10% of the press releases Wetts found featured anti-climate action messaging, those rarer releases were twice as likely to get coverage as pro-climate action press releases, which were far more prevalent.

Moreover, she found that press releases from large businesses had a much greater chance of receiving news coverage, as did press releases from groups representing business interests: About 16% of releases issued by business coalitions and trade associations got coverage, compared to about 9% from other types of organizations.

“The views of large businesses and opponents of climate action are being given an outsize opportunity to sway this debate,” Wetts says.

Wetts was also surprised to discover that organizations specializing in science and technology—such as IBM, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory—were among the least likely to see their views reported in the media, with only 2.9% of their press releases receiving coverage.

“You’d think, if anything, businesses with greater scientific expertise would receive more newspaper coverage,” she says. “But I found the opposite to be true.”

Wetts says the results seem to support the popular opinion that mainstream news organizations often mislead readers by giving equal weight to two sides of an argument, even when one side isn’t as widely believed or lacks scientific evidence.

“Journalists seem to feel that they always have to include opposing voices when they report on climate change,” Wetts says. “But sometimes they give those opposing voices so much weight, they lead readers to believe that climate denial is more than a fringe stance.”

News coverage that lends equal weight to those who oppose climate action does more than just alter public perception, Wetts says. It could also lead advocates and political leaders to modify the actions they take in the fight against climate change.

“The media is providing a distorted picture of how different groups feel on this issue,” she says. “That can dampen political will to act on climate change, with potentially serious consequences for how we as a society address—or fail to address—this issue.”

Source: Brown University

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