Nearly two in three Americans (63%) believe global warming is happening. Relatively few – only 16 percent – believe it is not. However, since Fall 2012, the percentage of Americans who believe global warming is happening has dropped 7 points to 63%, likely influenced by the relatively cold winter of 2012-13 in the United States and an unusually cold March just before the survey was conducted.
Executive Summary
- Nearly two in three Americans (63%) believe global warming is happening. Relatively few –
only 16 percent – believe it is not. However, since Fall 2012, the percentage of Americans who
believe global warming is real has dropped 7 points to 63%, likely influenced by the relatively
cold winter of 2012-13 (compared to the prior year) and an unusually cold March just before
the survey was conducted. In March of 2012, after an unusually warm winter, 66 percent of
Americans believed global warming was happening; thus, seasonal effects may account for at
least some of the change we observe. - Those who believe global warming is happening are more certain of their convictions than
those who do not. Of the 63% of Americans who believe global warming is happening, most
say they are “very” (33%) or “extremely sure” (27%). By contrast, of the unconvinced, fewer
are very (28%) or extremely sure of their view (18%). - About half of Americans (49%) believe global warming – if it is happening – is caused mostly
by human activities, a decrease of 5 points since Fall 2012, but similar to levels stretching back
several years. - More Americans believe that “most scientists think global warming is happening” than believe
there is widespread disagreement among scientists (42% versus 33%, respectively). One in five
Americans (20%) continue to feel they “don’t know enough to say” and fewer than one in 20
(4%) believe that “most scientists think global warming is not happening.” - About half of Americans (51%) say they are “somewhat” or “very worried” about global
warming, a 7 percentage-point decline in worry since Fall 2012. - At least four out of ten Americans say global warming will harm people in their community
(45%), their family (44%), or themselves (42%). Though Americans today, compared to Fall
2012, are slightly less likely to perceive these threats of harm, they are much more likely to do
so today than they were a year ago. - Global warming is also perceived as a threat to people in developing countries (55%, down 9
points since September 2012, but similar to March 2012), in other modern industrialized
countries (53%, down 4 points since September, but up 4 points since March 2012), and in the
United States (52%, down 5 points since September, but up 6 points since March 2012). - Today, four in ten Americans say people around the world are being harmed right now by
climate change (38%), while 34 percent say global warming is currently harming people in the
United States.
This report is based on findings from a nationally representative survey – Climate Change in the
American Mind – conducted by the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and the George
Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication. Interview dates: April 8 – 15.
Interviews: 1,045 Adults (18+). Total average margin of error: +/- 3 percentage points at the 95%
confidence level. The research was funded by the Surdna Foundation, the 11th Hour Project, the
Grantham Foundation, and the V.K. Rasmussen Foundation.
Principal Investigators:
Anthony Leiserowitz, PhD
Yale Project on Climate Change Communication
School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Yale University
(203) 432-4865
[email protected]
Edward Maibach, MPH, PhD
Center for Climate Change Communication
Department of Communication
George Mason University
(703) 993-1587
[email protected]
Connie Roser-Renouf, PhD
Center for Climate Change Communication
Department of Communication
George Mason University
[email protected]
Geoff Feinberg
Yale Project on Climate Change Communication
School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Yale University
(203) 432-7438
[email protected]
Peter Howe, PhD
Yale Project on Climate Change Communication
School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Yale University
[email protected]
Cite as: Leiserowitz, A., Maibach, E., Roser-Renouf, C., Feinberg, G., & Howe, P. (2013) Climate
change in the American mind: Americans’ global warming beliefs and attitudes in April, 2013. Yale University and George Mason University. New Haven, CT: Yale Project on Climate Change Communication.