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Home Research Topics International Affairs International Issues Environment & Climate
Pew Research CenterSeptember 13, 2021
In Response to Climate Change, Citizens in Advanced Economies Are Willing To Alter How They Live and Work

Final dispositions

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Final dispositions

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In Response to Climate Change, Citizens in Advanced Economies Are Willing To Alter How They Live and Work
People across world greatly concerned about climate change and willing to make sacrifices to address it, but there is less confidence in efforts to solve the problem
Intense concern about the personal effects of climate change has increased sharply in several major economies since 2015
Younger adults tend to be more concerned than older counterparts that climate change will harm them
Ideological left is more willing to adjust lifestyle in response to climate change
Internationally, EU, UN climate response earns mostly high praise, while U.S. and China get poor marks
Many are concerned climate change will personally harm them during their lifetimes
Rising concern that climate change will cause personal harm-07
Those on ideological left are more likely to be concerned about personal harm of climate change than those on the right
Women are more concerned about the harm of climate change than men in many advanced economies
Most people in publics surveyed are willing to make at least some changes to their lives to help reduce the effects of climate change
Young adults are more likely than older adults in some countries to be willing to make lifestyle changes to help reduce the effects of climate change
Willingness to change behavior to reduce effects of climate change is tied to education
Majorities in Europe confident in own public’s response to climate change
Ideological divides in evaluation of climate change handling
Doubts that international community can reduce effects of climate change are common but not ubiquitous
Those with a favorable view of UN more likely to have confidence in international climate change action
Publics are divided over the economic impact of international actions to address global climate change
Left-leaning adults are generally more likely than those on right to see climate change efforts as boon to economy
EU and UN receive generally higher ratings on climate response than U.S. or China
Majorities praise the EU’s response to global climate change
UN response to global climate change elicits generally positive responses
Most disapprove of U.S. handling of climate change
Ideological right is more enthusiastic about U.S. approach to climate change
Advanced economies disapprove of how China is handling global climate change
American Trends Panel recruitment surveys
Invitation and reminder dates
Weighting dimensions
Unweighted sample sizes and error attributable to sampling
Final dispositions
Cumulative response rate

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