Though the warnings and predictions from the scientific community focused on climate change become more dire by the year, month, and day—what should be the coverage of the climate crisis by the largest television news outlets in the U.S. is proving immune to the severity of the situation.
“We are more than aware that major fossil fuel companies spend significant amounts of money advertising on your networks. We hope that this is not influencing your decision about the subjects discussed or the guests who appear on your network programming.”
That’s according to a new analysis by news watchdog Media Matters, released Thursday, which shows that news coverage by ABC, CBS, NBC and FOX peaked in 2009 but has flat-lined since even as the scientific case and evidence of global warming has significantly raised the threat level of the problem over the last five years.
As the group states in their report, though they did better in 2013 than in 2012, the largest corporate media news channels “offered tepid coverage” of climate change despite a major report by the IPCC, a presidential speech by Obama focused on the issue, and a serious scientific milestone on global warming as the carbon concentration of the atmosphere hit 400 parts per million for the first time in human history.
Despite all that, “broadcast news’ climate coverage remained relatively low” compared to other years.
According to the study: “Altogether, ABC, CBS and NBC reported on global warming for nearly an hour and 42 minutes during their nightly newscasts in 2013, compared to a combined total of less than an hour in all of 2012. The majority of this coverage — 58 percent — was driven by stories on climate change’s relation to extreme weather or impacts on wildlife, while 19 percent was driven by scientific findings, another 19 percent by political stories related to climate change, and 4 percent by other stories.”
And on the networks’ political weekend shows? “Out of a year’s worth of coverage, the Sunday shows focused on climate change for 27 minutes, the most aired since 2009.”
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