The media excessively dramatise climate change impacts, says IPPR.
Apocalyptic visions of climate change used by newspapers, environmental
groups and the UK government amount to "climate porn", a think-tank says.
The report from the Labour-leaning Institute for Public Policy Research
(IPPR) says over-use of alarming images is a "counsel of despair".
It says they make people feel helpless and says the use of cataclysmic
imagery is partly commercially motivated.
However, newspapers have defended their coverage of a "crucial issue".
Nobody knows
The IPPR report also criticises the reporting of individual
climate-friendly acts as "mundane, domestic and uncompelling".
The style of climate change discourse is that we maximise the problem
and minimise the solution.
"The climate change discourse in the UK today looks confusing,
contradictory and chaotic," says the report, entitled Warm Words.
"It seems likely that the overarching message for the lay public is that
in fact, nobody really knows."
Alarm and rhetoric
IPPR s head of climate change Simon Retallack, who commissioned the
report from communication specialists Gill Ereaut and Nat Segnit, said:
"We were conscious of the fact that the amount of climate change
coverage has increased significantly over the last few years, but there
had been no analysis of what the coverage amounted to and what impact it
might be having."
They analysed 600 newspaper and magazine articles, as well as broadcast
news and adverts.
Coverage breaks down, they concluded, into several distinct areas,
including:
Alarmism, characterised by images and words of catastrophe
Settlerdom, in which "common sense" is used to argue against the
scientific consensus
Rhetorical scepticism, which argues the science is bad and the dangers hyped
Techno-optimism, the argument that technology can solve the problem
Publications said often to take a "sceptical" line included the Daily
Mail and Sunday Telegraph.
Into the "alarmist" camp the authors put articles published in
newspapers such as the Independent, Financial Times and Sunday Times, as
well as statements from environmental groups, academics including James
Lovelock and Lord May, and some government programmes.
"It is appropriate to call [what some of these groups publish] climate
porn, because on some level it is like a disaster movie," Mr Retallack
told the BBC News website.
"The public become disempowered because its too big for them; and when
it sounds like science fiction, there is an element of the unreal there."
Horror film
No British newspaper has taken climate change to its core agenda quite
like the Independent, which regularly publishes graphic-laden front
pages threatening global meltdown, with articles inside continuing the
theme.
If our readers thought we put climate change on our front pages for the
same reason that porn mags put naked women on their front pages, they
would stop reading us
A recent leader, commenting on the heatwave then affecting Britain,
said: "Climate change is an 18-rated horror film. This is its PG-rated
trailer.
"The awesome truth is that we are the last generation to enjoy the kind
of climate that allowed civilisation to germinate, grow and flourish
since the start of settled agriculture 11,000 years ago."
Ian Birrell, the newspaper s deputy editor, said climate change was
serious enough to merit this kind of linguistic treatment.
"The Independent led the way on campaigning on climate change and global
warming because clearly its a crucial issue facing the world," he said.
"You can see the success of our campaign in the way that the issue has
risen up the political agenda."
Mr Retallack, however, believes some newspapers take an alarmist line on
climate change through commercial motives rather than ideology.
"Every newspaper is a commercial organisation," he said, "and when you
have a terrifying image on the front of the paper, you are likely to
sell more copies than when you write about solutions."
Mr Birrell denied the charge. "You put on your front page what you deem
important and what you think is important to your readers," he said.
"If our readers thought we put climate change on our front pages for the
same reason that porn mags put naked women on their front pages, they
would stop reading us.
"And I disagree that there s an implicit counsel of despair, because
while we re campaigning on big issues such as ice caps, we also do a
large amount on how people can change their own lives, through cycling,
installing energy-efficient lighting, recycling, food miles; we ve been
equally committed on these issues."
Small is not beautiful
The IPPR report acknowledges that the media, government and NGOs do
discuss individual actions which can impact greenhouse gas emissions,
such as installing low-energy lightbulbs.
But, it says, there is a mismatch of scale; a conclusion with which
Solitaire Townsend, MD of the sustainable development communications
consultancy Futerra, agrees.
"The style of climate change discourse is that we maximise the problem
and minimise the solution," she said.
"So we use a loud rumbling voice to talk about the challenge, about
melting ice and drought; yet we have a mouse-like voice when we talk
about easy, cheap and simple solutions, making them sound as tiny as
possible because we think thats what makes them acceptable to the public.
"In fact it makes them seem trivial in relation to the problem."
Mr Retallack believes his report contains important lessons for the
government as it attempts to engage the British public with climate change.
"The government has just put £12m into climate change communication
initiatives," he said, "including teams which will work at the local level.
"Its vital that this motivates and engages the public."
(Por Richard Black, BBC News, 03/08/2006)