Earth Day: Indians have sense of onus on climate change but live in their own reality, Ipsos global survey finds


by The Indian Express

The Indian Express— A new 33-country survey released by Ipsos - one of the world's leading market research companies - marking Earth Day, looks at how attitudes to climate change are transforming. The study says that although Indians have a sense of onus on climate change, they live in their own reality. For the survey, Ipsos interviewed 24,290 people online in 33 countries between January 26 and February 9, 2024. Earth day is recognised globally on April 22. Nationally, the study finds that 75 percent or more...

Breitbart—Earth Day Poll: ‘Climate Change’ Last Priority for Americans. Global warming, now dubbed "climate change," which covers both the cooling and warming of the globe, is tied for Americans' last priority.

afaqs!—National Geographic India's 'One for Change' initiative promotes sustainable living on Earth Day. With the use of heart-stirring narratives, it shows animals' perspectives and encourages people to preserve diverse species' habitats.In less than 50 years, Earth has lost 69% of the average wildlife population. Wildlife plays a significant role in the stability of the environment, ecosystem, and our lives. The quality of our existence is determined by how well we take care of them and our planet. National Geographic in India, with a mission to ignite hope and change among viewers and the wider...

The Conversation—Earth Day 2024: 'Green muscle memory' and climate education promote behaviour change. Sparking global momentum and energy in young people through climate education can go a long way to addressing climate change now and in the near future.