If you have news alerts active on your phone, odds are you woke up Monday to grim tidings: The International Panel on Climate Change’s latest report says the warming of our planet is “irreversible for centuries to millennia.” The more than 200 scientists involved in drafting the report were more certain than ever that human influence had warmed the planet by about 2 degrees Fahrenheit since the 19th century.
But among the horrified screenshots and quote tweets juxtaposing the new report and the wildfires in Greece, I noted something else as I scrolled through Twitter. Climate reporters, people like HuffPost’s Alexander Kaufman, who spend day after day explaining the effects of climate change, were a bit more, well, disgruntled than I expected.
“I’m sorry, but no one’s more lazy or, frankly, pathetic than influential Beltway people who tune in for climate only when the IPCC puts out a report, then exclaim how f—– we all are,” he tweeted. “Grow up, exercise some discipline, take responsibility. The nihilism is so childish and lame.”
It’s a good point. There’s no point in defeatism — especially when the IPCC’s report stresses that there is still time to prevent the very worst effects of climate change from taking hold.
There’s no point in defeatism — especially when the IPCC’s report stresses that there is still time to prevent the very worst effects of climate change from taking hold.
“Scientists have narrowed the estimated range for how temperatures respond to greenhouse-gas emissions,” Bloomberg News’ Akshat Rathi explained on Twitter. “That’s good news and bad news. The worst-case scenario from warming is unlikely, but so is the best-case scenario. Better news is that temperatures will stabilize very soon after end the addition of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. The faster we reach that milestone, the fewer the climate impacts the world will face.”
But that still leaves a question that I’ve been struggling to answer: How do you get people to care about a dying planet?
At one point, it seemed almost easy. The ’90s were filled with pleas to individuals to act now to save the Earth. There was almost no limit to what average Americans could do, we were told: reduce, reuse, recycle; don’t waste water; turn off your lights when you’re not in the room; donate to save a panda; watch “Ferngully: The Last Rainforest.”
Thirty years later, the scale of the problem has grown beyond the ability of most of us to feel like we can have an individual impact on the crisis — especially when even the fixes pitched to us, like recycling, have fallen short. The difficulty in getting people to buy into “bold climate action,” as advocates love to refer to it, has also grown. Then, the requests were relatively minor inconveniences. What the IPCC is calling for is a total societal shift as every country on the planet ends use of fossil fuels entirely by 2050.
It’s a big ask for millions of Americans who are convinced that any changes automatically mean a decrease in their standard of living. That has resulted in two main ways of trying to tell climate stories. The first, as seen Monday in the framing of the IPCC report, is what I’ll call the “Be Very Afraid” method.
But folks can grow numb to those kinds of warnings as they continue with their daily lives. Yes, the IPCC report says, scientists can now link individual natural disasters with climate change in a way that they hadn’t been able to before. But even as those disasters spike, as we’ve seen in the earlier, longer and more violent hurricane seasons on one coast and the wildfire seasons on the other this past decade, those are still told as discrete stories. Even when you point out the cause, some people still refuse to link another state’s droughts with their own sweltering summers or unexpected deep freezes.
The second tactic is the “Who’s Profiting From This?” model. In a fantastic appearance on CNN’s “Reliable Sources,” Emily Atkin, an MSNBC columnist and author of the Heated climate newsletter, explained that “climate change is not something that’s happening to us. It’s something that’s being done to us.” The fact that there are corporations in the fossil fuel industry that are profiting while their products harm some of the most vulnerable populations means “it’s a corruption story.”








