On September 25, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its third major climate change report of the last year. The latest IPCC report paints a grim picture for the world’s oceans, ice, and marine ecosystems.
The report’s release came on the heels of the Covering Climate Now project, an ambitious effort in which 300 worldwide outlets signed on “to maximize coverage of the climate crisis and its impacts in the lead up to the United Nations Climate Summit on September 23.” Unfortunately, many major U.S. news outlets abstained from the effort; CBS News and PBS NewsHour were the only major national broadcast television partners of Covering Climate Now, and The Seattle Times was the only top 15 U.S. print newspaper by circulation to partner with the project.
Ultimately, newspapers -- including those unaffiliated with the Covering Climate Now project -- did a much better job than major broadcast networks of covering the new IPCC report. Twelve of the top 15 U.S. newspapers by circulation covered the new report in print. But on TV, CBS Evening News and PBS NewsHour were the only major broadcast nightly news shows to cover the report.