Post by tam on Jan 23, 2013 22:12:36 GMT 10
In a year of strange weather worldwide, climate change reporting by the world's journalists fell another two per cent in 2012, according to an archive of media coverage. But there were some surprises.
WIDESPREAD DROUGHT, super-storm Sandy, and a melting ice cap failed to revive the media's interest in climate change in 2012, with worldwide coverage continuing its three-year slide, according to a media database maintained by the nonprofit journalism site The Daily Climate.
The decline in the number of stories published on the topic - two per cent fewer than 2011 - was, however, the smallest since the United Nations climate talks collapsed in Copenhagen in 2009.
Coverage of climate impacts - extreme weather, melting glaciers and Arctic ice, warming temperatures and more - dominated climate news, accounting for almost one of every three stories written on the topic in 2012. That is the highest proportion in the five years that the website has been tracking coverage.
And coverage rebounded in some areas, particularly by the editorial boards of the world's newspapers.
Separate analyses by other media watchers even showed an increase in some climate-related reporting. Whether this represents a one-year blip or the start of a trend remains unclear, journalists and media researchers say.
"I ask myself, 'In 20 years, what will we be proudest that we addressed, and where will we scratch our head and say why didn't we focus more on that?'" said Glenn Kramon, assistant managing editor of the New York Times.
The Times published the most stories on climate change and had the biggest increase in coverage among the five largest US daily papers, according to media trackers at the University of Colorado.
"Climate change is one of the few subjects so important that we need to be oblivious to cycles and just cover it as hard as we can all the time," Kramon said.
Last year 7,194 reporters and commentators filed 18,546 stories in the publications watched by The Daily Climate, compared to 7,166 reporters who filed 18,995 stories in 2011.
The numbers remain far from 2009's peak, when roughly 11,000 reporters and commentators published 32,400 items on climate change, based on the news site's archive.
Some surprises
Still, there were some surprises. Stories linking climate change to sea-rise, weird weather and other events showed an all-time high, according to the archives: Some 5,800 stories were published on this facet of climate change, 37 per cent more than 2011 and 25 per cent more than during the 2009 peak.
And newspaper editorial boards, after growing silent on the topic in 2010 and 2011, gave slightly more voice to the issue in 2012. Daily Climate's archives show 633 editorials for the year - nearly 10 per cent more than in 2011.
Daily Climate is an independent, non-profit news site covering climate change. It relies on a team of researchers and editors, using customised searches, to compile a daily aggregation of climate coverage by global "mainstream" media: newspapers, TV and radio outlets, as well as select news websites from center-left to center-right.
The aggregation is meant to provide a broad sampling of the day's coverage, not a comprehensive list. Daily Climate does not capture every story or byline produced on the topic. But search methods and parameters are kept consistent from year to year, facilitating a comparison of media trends dating back to 2008, the first full year of the news service's operation.
Other media analysts noted a rebound in climate coverage in 2012.
Robert Brulle, a professor of sociology and environmental science at Drexel University in Philadelphia, has been tracking television coverage of climate change since the 1980s. Last year, the news operations at the American ABC, CBS and NBC almost doubled their coverage of climate-related issues, airing 29 stories - compared with 15 stories in 2011.
The Centre for Science and Technology Policy Research at the University of Colorado has tracked media coverage of climate change since 2000. Researchers there saw an increase across all media in 2012 as well: Europe, Asia, Africa and South America and the five largest US daily newspapers.
And separate analysis by Bill Kovarik, professor of communications at Radford University in Virginia, of the Lexis Nexis media database found that the four largest US daily newspapers - Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Times and Washington Post - published a total of 1,770 stories total on climate change last year.
That's about 10 per cent more than 2011's tally, Kovarik noted, but it is 11 per cent below the number of stories the four papers published on the topic in 2010.
There are some discrepancies among the databases: Daily Climate, for instance, did not reflect the rise in New York Times' coverage seen by the University of Colorado and Lexis Nexis.
Driving the change
What drove the change is less clear. Anomalous weather, particularly the American drought and Hurricane Sandy, focused much of the media's attention in 2012 on links with climate change, analysts say. Of the 29 network news stories on climate tracked by Brulle, for instance, 17 centred around extreme weather and climate.
And 2012 offered several opportunities for climate change to become a broader story for the public, said Max Boykoff, assistant professor at the University of Colorado's Center for Science and Technology Policy Research.
Looking from the 1980s on, Boykoff has found climate reporting generally falls into four main themes - political, scientific, meteorological, and cultural - and that coverage intensifies and is sustained when events cross one or more boundaries. Hurricane Sandy's impact on the presidential election was one example from 2012.
With President Obama starting his second term and the first major climate assessment since 2007 expected from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the climate story will likely continue to cross those boundaries in 2013, Boykoff said. "We may see these things coming together in 2013. It could be an interesting year."
Increasing recognition
Looking worldwide, many major news wires and outlets gave the issue roughly the same amount of ink in 2012 as in 2011, according to the Daily Climate's archives: The Associated Press, Reuters, The Guardian and the Washington Post, among others, were fairly flat or saw slight rises in bylines. The BBC continued its three-year slide, publishing 277 stories in 2012, 15 per cent off 2011's tally and almost 60 per cent fewer stories than its 2009 peak.
Making up ground in 2012 were a proliferating number of specialised media sites, like Climate Central, which published at least 368 stories last year largely via two reporters, Andrew Freedman and Michael Lemonick; and Inside Climate News, which published some 157 pieces. Scientific American and The Hill, a Congressional newspaper focusing on lobbying and politics, also covered the issue aggressively in 2012, with 169 and 202 stories respectively from the two publications.
Those specialised outlets - as well as the many bloggers writing on the topic - tend to push climate news into more mainstream and general publications, say editors and researchers.
www.abc.net.au/environment/articles/2013/01/23/3673340.htm
Are people getting tired of Climate change?
WIDESPREAD DROUGHT, super-storm Sandy, and a melting ice cap failed to revive the media's interest in climate change in 2012, with worldwide coverage continuing its three-year slide, according to a media database maintained by the nonprofit journalism site The Daily Climate.
The decline in the number of stories published on the topic - two per cent fewer than 2011 - was, however, the smallest since the United Nations climate talks collapsed in Copenhagen in 2009.
Coverage of climate impacts - extreme weather, melting glaciers and Arctic ice, warming temperatures and more - dominated climate news, accounting for almost one of every three stories written on the topic in 2012. That is the highest proportion in the five years that the website has been tracking coverage.
And coverage rebounded in some areas, particularly by the editorial boards of the world's newspapers.
Separate analyses by other media watchers even showed an increase in some climate-related reporting. Whether this represents a one-year blip or the start of a trend remains unclear, journalists and media researchers say.
"I ask myself, 'In 20 years, what will we be proudest that we addressed, and where will we scratch our head and say why didn't we focus more on that?'" said Glenn Kramon, assistant managing editor of the New York Times.
The Times published the most stories on climate change and had the biggest increase in coverage among the five largest US daily papers, according to media trackers at the University of Colorado.
"Climate change is one of the few subjects so important that we need to be oblivious to cycles and just cover it as hard as we can all the time," Kramon said.
Last year 7,194 reporters and commentators filed 18,546 stories in the publications watched by The Daily Climate, compared to 7,166 reporters who filed 18,995 stories in 2011.
The numbers remain far from 2009's peak, when roughly 11,000 reporters and commentators published 32,400 items on climate change, based on the news site's archive.
Some surprises
Still, there were some surprises. Stories linking climate change to sea-rise, weird weather and other events showed an all-time high, according to the archives: Some 5,800 stories were published on this facet of climate change, 37 per cent more than 2011 and 25 per cent more than during the 2009 peak.
And newspaper editorial boards, after growing silent on the topic in 2010 and 2011, gave slightly more voice to the issue in 2012. Daily Climate's archives show 633 editorials for the year - nearly 10 per cent more than in 2011.
Daily Climate is an independent, non-profit news site covering climate change. It relies on a team of researchers and editors, using customised searches, to compile a daily aggregation of climate coverage by global "mainstream" media: newspapers, TV and radio outlets, as well as select news websites from center-left to center-right.
The aggregation is meant to provide a broad sampling of the day's coverage, not a comprehensive list. Daily Climate does not capture every story or byline produced on the topic. But search methods and parameters are kept consistent from year to year, facilitating a comparison of media trends dating back to 2008, the first full year of the news service's operation.
Other media analysts noted a rebound in climate coverage in 2012.
Robert Brulle, a professor of sociology and environmental science at Drexel University in Philadelphia, has been tracking television coverage of climate change since the 1980s. Last year, the news operations at the American ABC, CBS and NBC almost doubled their coverage of climate-related issues, airing 29 stories - compared with 15 stories in 2011.
The Centre for Science and Technology Policy Research at the University of Colorado has tracked media coverage of climate change since 2000. Researchers there saw an increase across all media in 2012 as well: Europe, Asia, Africa and South America and the five largest US daily newspapers.
And separate analysis by Bill Kovarik, professor of communications at Radford University in Virginia, of the Lexis Nexis media database found that the four largest US daily newspapers - Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Times and Washington Post - published a total of 1,770 stories total on climate change last year.
That's about 10 per cent more than 2011's tally, Kovarik noted, but it is 11 per cent below the number of stories the four papers published on the topic in 2010.
There are some discrepancies among the databases: Daily Climate, for instance, did not reflect the rise in New York Times' coverage seen by the University of Colorado and Lexis Nexis.
Driving the change
What drove the change is less clear. Anomalous weather, particularly the American drought and Hurricane Sandy, focused much of the media's attention in 2012 on links with climate change, analysts say. Of the 29 network news stories on climate tracked by Brulle, for instance, 17 centred around extreme weather and climate.
And 2012 offered several opportunities for climate change to become a broader story for the public, said Max Boykoff, assistant professor at the University of Colorado's Center for Science and Technology Policy Research.
Looking from the 1980s on, Boykoff has found climate reporting generally falls into four main themes - political, scientific, meteorological, and cultural - and that coverage intensifies and is sustained when events cross one or more boundaries. Hurricane Sandy's impact on the presidential election was one example from 2012.
With President Obama starting his second term and the first major climate assessment since 2007 expected from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the climate story will likely continue to cross those boundaries in 2013, Boykoff said. "We may see these things coming together in 2013. It could be an interesting year."
Increasing recognition
Looking worldwide, many major news wires and outlets gave the issue roughly the same amount of ink in 2012 as in 2011, according to the Daily Climate's archives: The Associated Press, Reuters, The Guardian and the Washington Post, among others, were fairly flat or saw slight rises in bylines. The BBC continued its three-year slide, publishing 277 stories in 2012, 15 per cent off 2011's tally and almost 60 per cent fewer stories than its 2009 peak.
Making up ground in 2012 were a proliferating number of specialised media sites, like Climate Central, which published at least 368 stories last year largely via two reporters, Andrew Freedman and Michael Lemonick; and Inside Climate News, which published some 157 pieces. Scientific American and The Hill, a Congressional newspaper focusing on lobbying and politics, also covered the issue aggressively in 2012, with 169 and 202 stories respectively from the two publications.
Those specialised outlets - as well as the many bloggers writing on the topic - tend to push climate news into more mainstream and general publications, say editors and researchers.
www.abc.net.au/environment/articles/2013/01/23/3673340.htm
Are people getting tired of Climate change?