A summer of climate-fueled extreme weather events has continued on in August across much of the U.S. and Europe. More extreme heat hit western Europe, which had just experienced some of the worst heat the continent had ever seen in July. The region could also be going through its worst drought in nearly 500 years. Meanwhile, a prolonged megadrought in the U.S. meant that seven western states had to cut water use from the Colorado River. In addition to extreme weather events, several new studies were released in August that highlighted just how dire the climate crisis has become. One found that over 100 million Americans will be living under an “extreme heat belt” by 2050. Another found that a megaflood could inundate large swaths of California, while a third study found that the Arctic region is warming “nearly four times faster than the Earth as a whole.”
Extreme heat, prolonged drought, polar warming, and flooding — these events are all intensified by human-induced climate change.
National TV news has been reporting on these issues while the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) passed Congress on August 12 and was then signed into law by President Biden on August 16. As the most significant (though still imperfect) climate legislation ever passed in the U.S., the IRA can go a long way toward reducing emissions here in the U.S. It could also spur other countries to act on climate change and ultimately move the needle in ensuring that extreme weather events like those we’ve experienced this summer don’t worsen in the future.
While TV networks did a good job of incorporating climate change into segments on these extreme weather events, very rarely did they weave the IRA and the importance of climate solutions into this reporting.
Over a 5-day period — from August 12, when the IRA passed Congress, to August 16, when it was signed into law by President Biden — news shows on ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, and MSNBC aired a combined 60 segments on various extreme weather events. While 34 segments (57%) mentioned climate change, only 8 of them (13%) specifically mentioned the IRA and the need to address the climate crisis in order to prevent these events from worsening in the future.
Over half of corporate broadcast TV news segments on extreme weather mentioned climate change, but only 1 mentioned the IRA
Broadcast networks ABC, CBS, and NBC ran a combined 17 extreme weather segments between August 12 and August 16. Climate change was mentioned in 9 of them (53%).
CBS mentioned climate change in 3 of its 5 extreme weather segments; NBC mentioned climate in 4 of its 8 segments; ABC mentioned climate in 2 of its 4 segments. Of these climate segments, 7 centered around the western U.S. drought or extreme heat, while 1 centered around the California megaflood study. Additionally, 1 segment on the August 13 edition of NBC’s Today looked at how worsening extreme weather events in the U.S. are creating climate refugees.
This latest data from these networks shows a slight improvement in linking climate change to worsening extreme weather events. From July 19 to 23, these networks mentioned climate in only 28% of global heat segments. From June 14 to 21, these networks mentioned climate change in only 9% of reporting on various extreme weather events.
Despite their improvement at linking climate change to worsening extreme weather, these networks still largely failed to discuss climate solutions, such as the IRA, in their extreme weather reporting. Only the August 16 edition of CBS Evening News mentioned the IRA in an extreme weather segment; the network linked it to the western U.S. megadrought and the water crisis that the drought is leading to. In fact, the western U.S. water crisis was CBS Evening News’ lead story that night.