Yale researchers have found that the two terms, often used interchangeably, generate very different responses

This article is more than 6 years old

This article is more than 6 years old

Barack Obama, scientists and campaigners have all looked at how to engage Americans more powerfully on the environment. Now researchers have come up with one critical piece of advice: do say "global warming", don't say "climate change".

New research released on Tuesday found Americans care more deeply when the term "global warming" is used to describe the major environmental challenge. "Climate change", in contrast, leaves them relatively cold.

The two terms are often used interchangeably but they generate very different responses, the researchers from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communications and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communications said.



“Those two terms get heard and interpreted in very different ways,” Anthony Leiserowitz, a research scientist at Yale and one of the lead authors, told The Guardian. “The choice of these two terms really does matter, depending on who you are talking to.”



The term “global warming” resonates far more powerfully, triggering images of ice melt, extreme weather and catastrophe. Mention “climate change”, however, and many Americans begin to disengage, the researchers found.

The researchers found naming the issue as “global warming” rather than climate change made it easier to connect. Americans in general were 13% more likely to say that global warming was a bad thing.



The differences were even more pronounced among Latinos, African-Americans, women, and young people.



Latinos were 30% more likely to view global warming as a personal threat, compared to climate change. African-Americans were 20% more likely to rate global warming as a very big risk, compared to climate change.

George W Bush swapped the term climate change for global warming in 2002, on the advice of the Republican political consultant, Frank Luntz.

In a secret memo before the mid-term elections, Luntz warned Republicans – and Bush in particular – were singularly weak on the environment. He advised a strategy of disputing climate science, and of avoiding the term "global warming' because of its highly negative connotations.

“It's time for us to start talking about 'climate change' instead of global warming ... 'climate change' is less frightening than 'global warming',” said the memo obtained by the Environmental Working Group.

The confusion stuck.

The Obama administration, scientists and campaign groups have all struggled with how to communicate with Americans about the global challenge.



Officials in Obama's first term avoided any mention of the words global warming or climate change – believing it would provoke a backlash from Republicans – and spoke instead of “clean energy” and “green jobs”.



Scientists often prefer climate change to global warming for technical reasons.



Meanwhile, some campaign groups have argued that “global warming” was considered too political, and that “climate change” would make it easier to appeal to Republicans. The Bush administration preferred to use "climate change".



Others coined new terms such as “climate crisis” and “global weirding”.



It turns out they would have all been better off sticking with global warming.

The survey sample of 1,657 people, compiled over a two-week period late last year, found a large swathe of Americans turned off by the words “climate change”.

“The use of the term climate change appears to actually reduce issue engagement by Democrats, Independents, liberals, and moderates, as well as a variety of subgroups within American society, including men, women, minorities, different generations, and across political and partisan lines,” the researchers said.



“While global warming has catastrophic connotations attached to it, climate change suggests a more controllable and less emotional challenge.”



Meanwhile, there was no sign that using the term climate change was making any inroads in winning over Republicans, the researchers found.



“It is a kind of a wake-up call that it is complicated and that sometimes, depending on who you are communicating with, you are not achieving what you think you are,” Leiserowitz said.

