More Americans view climate change as
'imminent' threat: Reuters/Ipsos Poll
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[December 13, 2018]
By Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A growing percentage
of Americans see climate change as an “imminent” threat driven mainly by
human activity, and more than two-thirds want Washington to work with
other nations to combat it, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released
on Thursday.
The public concern over global warming in the United States clashes with
President Donald Trump’s policies aimed at maximizing fossil fuels
production and dismantling climate protections he views as too onerous
and costly for industry.
Trump last year announced his intention to withdraw the United States
from the Paris Agreement, an accord to curb global warming struck by
nearly 200 nations in 2015 that he said would kill American jobs and
have no tangible environmental benefit.
Delegates from over 130 countries are now meeting in the Polish city of
Katowice to write a rulebook for the deal and United Nations
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday warned failure to reach
an agreement would be suicidal.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll, taken from Nov. 29 to Dec. 10, found that 35
percent of U.S. adults now see global warming as an "imminent" threat,
up from 32 percent in 2017 and 24 percent in 2015.
More than half, or 57 percent, also think global warming is caused by
"human activity" or "mostly human activity”, according to the survey, up
from the 47 percent who attributed it to human activity in a similar
poll in 2012.

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And 69 percent said in the poll that the United States should work
with other nations to curb climate change, including 64 percent of
Republicans and 80 percent of Democrats. That marks a decline from
72 percent in a similar poll in 2017.
The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll surveyed 4,660 adults in English in
the United States and has a credibility interval, a measure of
precision, of 2 percentage points.

The survey came close on the heels of a U.S. government report
released last month that said climate change will cost the U.S.
economy hundreds of billions of dollars by the end of the century,
undermining health, infrastructure, and industries from farming to
energy production.
Trump rejected the report's findings, saying “I don’t believe it.”
The White House said the report relied on faulty methodology and
that the next assessment of the threats posed by climate change
would be more transparent and data driven.
The United States has seen a surge in oil and gas output in the past
decade, due mainly to advances in drilling technology, and this year
became the world’s top producer of petroleum ahead of Saudi Arabia
and Russia.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Lisa
Shumaker)
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