As the next U.N. Climate Change Conference approaches, people in advanced economies are highly concerned about the personal impact of climate change, and are willing to make changes to address the issue with personal and international action, according to a new Pew Research Center survey. Americans are also worried about the personal impacts of climate change, but they are not as concerned as other publics.

There is minimal praise from other societies for how the United States and China, both leading carbon dioxide emitters, are handling climate change, even as the E.U. and the U.N. are given high marks for their actions. But within American society, there are sharp ideological divides on the issue, more so than in other nations.

U.S. adults on the left and on the right are often sharply divided in their views of how different countries and international actors are responding to climate change. And Americans’ confidence in the international community to reduce the effects of climate change is also divided sharply along partisan lines.