Sort by:
RelevanceDate
Search Results
Showing 41-50 of 200 results.
A Steady 57% in U.S. Blame Humans for Global Warming
U.S. public agreement with the view that human activities have caused global warming, now 57%, has waxed and waned over the past decade, despite a steady increase in the percentage of Americans claiming they understand the issue well.
The Environment, Climate Change in the News
The American public wants more, rather than less, federal government environmental regulation.
Why Are Americans Not More Worried About Climate Change?
One of the most interesting, and to many most important, public opinion puzzles of our time is the evidence that the American public simply does not share a sense of urgency or a perception of the need for urgent action on the issue of climate ...
Cyberterrorism Tops List of 11 Potential Threats to U.S.
Americans consider cyberterrorism and the development of nuclear weapons by North Korea and Iran to be the most critical of 11 potential threats to the U.S.
Partisan Differences Growing on a Number of Issues
Republicans and Democrats have increasingly different views on many policy and social issues, but on several, the party gap has not changed or has even narrowed.
In U.S., Concern About Environmental Threats Eases
Americans' concern about several different environmental problems has eased after increasing last year. Americans worry most about polluted drinking water and least about global warming.
Gallup Reporter Resources: Climate
Subscribe to the Gallup Reporter Resources newsletter to receive data, discoveries and analysis created and curated for reporters like you.
Most Americans Are Not Completely Sold on Electric Vehicles
Four percent of Americans report that they currently own an electric vehicle, and the public remains largely unconvinced that the use of EVs does a lot to help address climate change.
Americans Don't Attribute Colder Weather to Climate Change
Many more Americans who say their area is experiencing colder winter temperatures or drought attribute these events to normal yearly weather variations rather than climate change.
Americans' Concerns About Global Warming on the Rise
U.S. worry about global warming is heading back up after several years of diminished concern. Views toward most global warming issues now fall halfway between record levels of belief and skepticism.