The year has seen a marked improvement in climate journalism due to the efforts of multiple climate and environmental progressive groups, individual activists, and journalists to push the media to do a better job of reporting on how global warming is making our planet unhabitable for the human species.
In addition to the Covering Climate Now effort and the blazing path set by the Guardian, one of the biggest successes has been the shift by major television news networks toward using more accurate language to characterize climate change. An October study by the nonprofit advocacy group Public Citizen about network news’ use of the terms “crisis” or “emergency” in relation to climate change found that usage increased from 3.5% in 2018 to 29% between May and September, which represents a 700% boost. Additionally, CNN and MSNBC referred to climate change as a crisis or emergency in more than 80% of segments covering the issue during September. (Note: Allison Fisher, a co-author of this post, previously worked for Public Citizen and contributed to the referenced study.)
Public awareness and interest in climate change, as measured by Google Trends, peaked in September -- the month of the historic Global Climate Strike. Searches for the term were higher than they had been in the search engine’s history. Media also reported extensively on the strike, among other important climate stories. Thirty-six of the top 50 U.S. newspapers by circulation featured a story about the strike on the front page of their print editions on September 21, the day after the strikes began, while 12 of the top 15 U.S. newspapers by circulation covered the dire U.N. climate report on the world’s oceans, ice, and marine ecosystems in their print editions on September 26, the day after the report was released.
Also notable, in response to voters making climate change a top-tier issue and activists calling for a dedicated climate presidential debate, both CNN and MSNBC hosted generally well-received presidential forums devoted entirely to the climate crisis.
The culmination of a broad array of environmental organizations, activist groups, and journalists, among others, working to improve the media’s reporting on the climate crisis helped lay the ground work for Covering Climate Now. However, while 2019 has marked an important shift in climate coverage, there is still much work to do. Many of the largest newspapers, broadcast TV news shows, and corporate TV news networks still inconsistently report on the climate crisis, barely connect the dots between our warming world and extreme weather events, and rarely treat the issue with the urgency that it deserves.
Covering Climate Now and its lead partner, The Guardian, have provided an important model for climate journalism in the age of climate emergency that other media outlets will hopefully follow. Research shows that one of the most important drivers of climate action is public awareness. It is vital that more news outlets commit to shared, sustained, and substantive reporting that not only details the science behind the current and future consequences of the climate crisis, but also informs the public about potential solutions that could mitigate global warming’s worst effects.