On social media, Gen Z and Millennial adults interact more with climate change content than older generations
Among U.S. social media users, 45% of Gen Z adults have interacted with content that focuses on the need for action on climate change.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Among U.S. social media users, 45% of Gen Z adults have interacted with content that focuses on the need for action on climate change.
Majorities of Americans support an array of measures to address climate change but stop short of a full break with fossil fuels.
One-in-ten U.S. adults say they have taken part in citizen science in the past year, and 26% say they have ever done so.
As in 2016, 88% of U.S. adults say its benefits outweigh the risks. And the share who consider its preventive benefits to be “very high” rose by 11 points to 56%.
The United States is a nation divided when it comes to food, and Americans’ food preferences are especially evident in what they don’t eat.
About four-in-ten Americans (42%) say they would definitely or probably be interested in orbiting the Earth in a spacecraft in the future, while roughly six-in-ten (58%) say they would not be interested.
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