Global poll finds 73% want higher priority for climate
change
Britons among the most enthusiastic about action to stop global warming,
while Americans among least willing to put environment first, according to
global public opinion poll
The
Guardian (U.K.),
July 30, 2009
A
majority of peoples around the world want their governments to put action on
climate change at the top of the political agenda, a new global public opinion
poll suggests.
Unfortunately
for Barack Obama though, who has put energy reform at the top of his White House
to-do list, Americans are not necessarily among them.
Only
44% of Americans thought climate change should be a major preoccupation for the
Obama administration, the survey co-ordinated by the University of Maryland's
Program on International Policy Attitudes
said. The only other two countries unwilling to see their governments make
climate change a top focus were Iraq and the Palestinian territories. In 15
other countries though there was strong support for governments to do more to
deal with climate change.
Britons
were among the most enthusiastic supporters for greater government intervention,
with 77% urging officials to do more. Germans, however, think their government
has already done enough. Some 83% think their government has already adopted
climate change action as a top priority; 27% would like the government to turn
its attention elsewhere.
"The
public is pulling for more - a lot more, no, but a bit more, yes. There is
definitely political capital there to move the ball forward and that is pretty
much universal," said Steven Kull, the director of the survey which drew on data
gathered by academic and marketing polling organisations in the respective
countries. Overall about 73% of those polled believe governments should make
climate change a top priority.
The
poll, which sampled the opinions of 18,587 people in 19 countries, , found broad
popular support for making climate change a top priority extended even to those
countries whose governments have yet to commit to global action. In China there
was overwhelming support 94% for the government to keep climate change on
the front burner. And in India, which is also rapidly emerging as one of the
world's leading producers of global warming pollution, 59% of the public wanted
their government to make climate change a top priority.
That
defies the hard line taken by the country's environment minister, Jairam Ramesh,
earlier this month against putting any cap on its greenhouse gas
emissions.
Around
the globe, the public was unconvinced their governments were assigning high
enough priority to climate change. The disconnect suggests that there is greater
public support for action on public change than elected officials realise, Kull
said. "There is a tendency among policy makers to underestimate people's
readiness for action."
Only
four countries - Germany, Britain, China, and Indonesia - considered that their
governments were focused on climate change. But, that did not necessarily
satisfy the demand for even greater action.
Although
the majority of Britons, 58%, credit the government with making climate change a
major priority, even greater numbers, 89%, believe there is room for the
government to do even more.
guardian.co.uk
© Guardian News and Media Limited 2009