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One in six UK adults still doubt human links to climate change

In a frankly exasperating turn of events, a report has revealed that one in six UK adults are doubtful that humans significantly contribute to climate change.

Ready for the most face-palm inducing content youโ€™ll consume this week?

According to a recent survey conducted by the Kingโ€™s College London, one in six adults in the UK do not believe human activity to be a major contributor of climate change.

With the aim of testing the publicโ€™s trust in general expertise and government statistics, the British institution surveyed 12,000 adults across six European countries.

The topic of choice was climate change, and whether or not people believe man-made emissions to be a significant cause; a once contentious debate that we thought was well and truly done with at this avenue.

Considering the UN has ratified unequivocally that โ€˜human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean, and land,โ€™ we were surprised to see that 17% of Brits, 18% of Germans, 16% of Polacks, and almost a quarter of Norwegians registered doubt at the significance that our activity is having.

What was even more unexpected, is that the demographic conveying the most hope of doing anything to resolve the situation were 55 and over (34%). On the flip side of the coin, those who expressed the opinion that weโ€™re already too far gone to make amends were aged between 18-34 (60%).

This perhaps points to a growing sense of nihilism among Gen Zers, who feel as though theyโ€™ve been shouting into the abyss for years with little avail.

Overall, the study presents a 74% consensus from Europeans that climate change is primarily a man-made phenomenon. The Italians and Irish were firmest in this belief, at 82% and 81% respectively.

Despite the fact that, thankfully, the vast majority of participants recognised humanityโ€™s ecological impacts, the study concluded that the UK public in particular underestimates how strongly science agrees on the link between our activities and climate change.

Regrettably for those people, this is where individual opinion gets eclipsed by irrefutable fact. NASA states that 97% of climate scientists globally agree that humans are causing marked temperature shifts within our atmosphere.

In the last decade particularly, global events for climate change mitigation โ€“ and more so intensifying protests and activist efforts โ€“ generally have made people more ecologically conscious of what we do, eat, and buy. Nonetheless, reports such as these show that we havenโ€™t quite reached complete parity.

For Bobby Duffy, one of the reportโ€™s authors and a professor of public policy, the primary concern is that a lack of unanimity on climate change โ€˜could chip away at public support for policies to bring emissions down.โ€™

Fortunately, that doesnโ€™t appear to be a realistic prospect in the foreseeable future.

This study is in line with Meta and Yaleโ€™s recent findings on the same subject. Both suggest the majority of people believe that climate change is โ€˜mostly caused by human activitiesโ€™ or at least โ€˜caused equally by human activities and natural changes.โ€™

I guess the only way to prove the naysayers wrong, is by slashing emissions and showing the results. Like we really needed more motivation.

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