Epson Survey Reveals Startling Climate Reality Deficit — 46% Of People Optimistic We Will Avoid Climate Crisis In Their Lifetime
Epson Survey Reveals Startling Climate Reality Deficit — 46% Of People Optimistic We Will Avoid Climate Crisis In Their Lifetime
September 10, 2021-
Marking 50 days before the start of COP 26 in the UK in November, Epson announces the results of its Climate Reality Barometer. The survey captures global experiences and perceptions of climate change from 15,264 consumers across 15 countries and regions, including five key European markets. Epson’s research discovers a potentially damaging gap between climate reality and people’s understanding of its catastrophic effects.
Timed to help frame discussions at COP 26, the goal of the Epson Climate Reality Barometer is to raise greater public awareness of climate change impacts, influence transformative business decisions, and better inform policy makers.
Reality deficit: Optimism vs evidence
Individuals took part in the Barometer from Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Taiwan, the UK and the US. When questioned about their views on humanity’s ability to avert a climate crisis within their lifetimes, close to half of respondents (46%) state they are “very” or “somewhat” optimistic. This significantly outweighs just 27% who express that they are very or somewhat pessimistic.
The European picture — across France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK —suggests a more balanced view. Overall optimism in Europe at avoiding a climate crisis drops to 39%, while pessimism increases to 33%. The French emerge as the most optimistic (42%), whilst the Spanish are the most pessimistic (39%).
Globally, the most popular reasons supporting this optimism are growing public awareness of climate change (32%), the ability of science and technology to provide solutions (28%) and the move towards renewable energies (19%). Globally, 5% of respondents do not believe that there is a climate emergency at all — with Germany (7%) and the UK (6%) topping the list of European climate deniers.
Dialling down into results for [insert country] specifically, the Barometer shows that [PLACEHOLDER: insert country specific data relating to the global and European stats above:
- optimism and pessimism on solving the crisis; and
- the reasons that drive optimism]
As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports that some human-driven climate change will take millennia to reverse [i], and given a litany of events — including Italy registering the highest European temperature [ii] ever recorded, wildfires in France and Spain [iii], and floods [iv] in Germany — the Barometer’s findings suggest a triumph of optimism over evidence and a damaging Climate Reality Deficit.
Henning Ohlsson, Director of Sustainability, Epson Europe, said: “As the climate emergency unfolds before our eyes, it’s of real concern that so many people fail to recognise, or even actively deny, its existence. This is a wake-up call for everyone — governments, businesses and individuals — to work together so that COP 26 makes the decisions and inspires the actions needed to mitigate climate change.”
Reality check: Understanding vs action
The Barometer suggests that optimism may be the result of a failure to recognise climate change and, therefore, its scale.
Around three quarters of respondents see the link between climate change and rising global temperatures (77%), extreme weather (74%) and wildfires (73%). In contrast, awareness fell to just over half for events such as famine (57%), mass human migrations (55%) and insect outbreaks (51%). In Europe, national climate appears to be relevant, with Germany registering 73% awareness of higher temperatures, while (perhaps understandably) this rises to 84% in Italy.
Many see responsibility to tackle the emergency belonging to state and industry actors. Of those surveyed, more than one in four (27%) identify governments, and 18% businesses, as “most responsible”. Close to 18% acknowledge personal responsibility. Encouragingly, the largest single number of respondents identify responsibility as collective (31%).
In Europe, Spain places the highest emphasis on government responsibility (31%). The UK records the lowest figure for business responsibility (16%) and Germany the highest (27%). French respondents record the highest sense of personal responsibility (23%) vs the lowest in Germany (11%). The UK tops the European list for those who believe in collective responsibility (34%) vs the lowest in Italy (23.6%).
In [insert country] the Barometer shows that [PLACEHOLDER: insert country specific stats relating to the global and European results above:
- the events most and least associated with climate change; and
- who is seen is most/least responsible to tackle the crisis]
While people are willing to make lifestyle changes to tackle the crisis, some are slow to act. The Barometer shows that: 65% agree (already do or are planning) to reduce business and leisure travel – but only 40% have; 68% agree to move to electric vehicles — but only 16% have; and 58% agree to adopt a plant-based diet — but only 27% have. Even looking at relatively simple choices, such as boycotting unsustainable brands, while 63% agree, only 29% have already changed their shopping habits.
Business reality — the time to act is now
The Climate Reality Barometer suggests that for many, climate crisis remains something that happens to someone else. As the survey reveals that only 14% of respondents recognise big businesses as most responsible for tackling the climate emergency, and just 3% small companies (fewer than the 5% of climate change deniers), it also suggests that now is the time for companies of all sizes to play a bigger role.
Companies can empower other businesses and consumers with sustainability supporting innovations. At Epson, this has seen the development of, for example: initiatives to reduce customer impact through the use of highly energy efficient Heat-Free printing technology; and R&D into environmental technologies such as naturally derived (non-plastic) materials.
Beyond product and materials innovation, businesses can make a big difference by promoting and demonstrating climate responsibility. Epson carries this forward by: transitioning to 100% renewable electricity and engaging with initiatives such as the RE100 renewable energy project; working to close the resource loop by, for example, promoting product refurbishment and reuse; and engaging in high impact partnerships such as its work with National Geographic to protect permafrost[i]. protect permafrost [i].
Yasunori Ogawa, global president of Epson, commented: “The discovery of the Climate Reality Deficit shows that awareness, coupled with action, will be critical to tackling the emergency. Epson’s goal is to bring this awareness and the technologies needed — by our company, other businesses and consumers — to make transformational change. Sustainability is central to our business plan and backed by significant resources — because while we know there is a long way to go, we believe we can build a better future.”
[i] https://www.ipcc.ch/2021/08/09/ar6-wg1-20210809-pr/
[ii] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-58130893
[iii] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-08-17/wildfires-burn-in-france-and-spain-after-heatwaves
[iv] https://edition.cnn.com/2021/08/23/europe/germany-floods-belgium-climate-change-intl/index.html
Epson Survey Reveals Startling Climate Reality Deficit — 46% Of People Optimistic We Will Avoid Climate Crisis In Their Lifetime
September 10, 2021-
Marking 50 days before the start of COP 26 in the UK in November, Epson announces the results of its Climate Reality Barometer. The survey captures global experiences and perceptions of climate change from 15,264 consumers across 15 countries and regions, including five key European markets. Epson’s research discovers a potentially damaging gap between climate reality and people’s understanding of its catastrophic effects.
Timed to help frame discussions at COP 26, the goal of the Epson Climate Reality Barometer is to raise greater public awareness of climate change impacts, influence transformative business decisions, and better inform policy makers.
Reality deficit: Optimism vs evidence
Individuals took part in the Barometer from Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Taiwan, the UK and the US. When questioned about their views on humanity’s ability to avert a climate crisis within their lifetimes, close to half of respondents (46%) state they are “very” or “somewhat” optimistic. This significantly outweighs just 27% who express that they are very or somewhat pessimistic.
The European picture — across France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK —suggests a more balanced view. Overall optimism in Europe at avoiding a climate crisis drops to 39%, while pessimism increases to 33%. The French emerge as the most optimistic (42%), whilst the Spanish are the most pessimistic (39%).
Globally, the most popular reasons supporting this optimism are growing public awareness of climate change (32%), the ability of science and technology to provide solutions (28%) and the move towards renewable energies (19%). Globally, 5% of respondents do not believe that there is a climate emergency at all — with Germany (7%) and the UK (6%) topping the list of European climate deniers.
Dialling down into results for [insert country] specifically, the Barometer shows that [PLACEHOLDER: insert country specific data relating to the global and European stats above:
- optimism and pessimism on solving the crisis; and
- the reasons that drive optimism]
As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports that some human-driven climate change will take millennia to reverse [i], and given a litany of events — including Italy registering the highest European temperature [ii] ever recorded, wildfires in France and Spain [iii], and floods [iv] in Germany — the Barometer’s findings suggest a triumph of optimism over evidence and a damaging Climate Reality Deficit.
Henning Ohlsson, Director of Sustainability, Epson Europe, said: “As the climate emergency unfolds before our eyes, it’s of real concern that so many people fail to recognise, or even actively deny, its existence. This is a wake-up call for everyone — governments, businesses and individuals — to work together so that COP 26 makes the decisions and inspires the actions needed to mitigate climate change.”
Reality check: Understanding vs action
The Barometer suggests that optimism may be the result of a failure to recognise climate change and, therefore, its scale.
Around three quarters of respondents see the link between climate change and rising global temperatures (77%), extreme weather (74%) and wildfires (73%). In contrast, awareness fell to just over half for events such as famine (57%), mass human migrations (55%) and insect outbreaks (51%). In Europe, national climate appears to be relevant, with Germany registering 73% awareness of higher temperatures, while (perhaps understandably) this rises to 84% in Italy.
Many see responsibility to tackle the emergency belonging to state and industry actors. Of those surveyed, more than one in four (27%) identify governments, and 18% businesses, as “most responsible”. Close to 18% acknowledge personal responsibility. Encouragingly, the largest single number of respondents identify responsibility as collective (31%).
In Europe, Spain places the highest emphasis on government responsibility (31%). The UK records the lowest figure for business responsibility (16%) and Germany the highest (27%). French respondents record the highest sense of personal responsibility (23%) vs the lowest in Germany (11%). The UK tops the European list for those who believe in collective responsibility (34%) vs the lowest in Italy (23.6%).
In [insert country] the Barometer shows that [PLACEHOLDER: insert country specific stats relating to the global and European results above:
- the events most and least associated with climate change; and
- who is seen is most/least responsible to tackle the crisis]
While people are willing to make lifestyle changes to tackle the crisis, some are slow to act. The Barometer shows that: 65% agree (already do or are planning) to reduce business and leisure travel – but only 40% have; 68% agree to move to electric vehicles — but only 16% have; and 58% agree to adopt a plant-based diet — but only 27% have. Even looking at relatively simple choices, such as boycotting unsustainable brands, while 63% agree, only 29% have already changed their shopping habits.
Business reality — the time to act is now
The Climate Reality Barometer suggests that for many, climate crisis remains something that happens to someone else. As the survey reveals that only 14% of respondents recognise big businesses as most responsible for tackling the climate emergency, and just 3% small companies (fewer than the 5% of climate change deniers), it also suggests that now is the time for companies of all sizes to play a bigger role.
Companies can empower other businesses and consumers with sustainability supporting innovations. At Epson, this has seen the development of, for example: initiatives to reduce customer impact through the use of highly energy efficient Heat-Free printing technology; and R&D into environmental technologies such as naturally derived (non-plastic) materials.
Beyond product and materials innovation, businesses can make a big difference by promoting and demonstrating climate responsibility. Epson carries this forward by: transitioning to 100% renewable electricity and engaging with initiatives such as the RE100 renewable energy project; working to close the resource loop by, for example, promoting product refurbishment and reuse; and engaging in high impact partnerships such as its work with National Geographic to protect permafrost[i]. protect permafrost [i].
Yasunori Ogawa, global president of Epson, commented: “The discovery of the Climate Reality Deficit shows that awareness, coupled with action, will be critical to tackling the emergency. Epson’s goal is to bring this awareness and the technologies needed — by our company, other businesses and consumers — to make transformational change. Sustainability is central to our business plan and backed by significant resources — because while we know there is a long way to go, we believe we can build a better future.”
[i] https://www.ipcc.ch/2021/08/09/ar6-wg1-20210809-pr/
[ii] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-58130893
[iii] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-08-17/wildfires-burn-in-france-and-spain-after-heatwaves
[iv] https://edition.cnn.com/2021/08/23/europe/germany-floods-belgium-climate-change-intl/index.html
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About Epson
Epson is a global technology leader dedicated to co-creating sustainability and enriching communities by leveraging its efficient, compact, and precision technologies and digital technologies to connect people, things, and information. The company is focused on solving societal issues through innovations in home and office printing, commercial and industrial printing, manufacturing, visual and lifestyle. Epson will become carbon negative and eliminate use of exhaustible underground resources such as oil and metal by 2050.
Led by the Japan-based Seiko Epson Corporation, the worldwide Epson Group generates annual sales of around JPY 1 trillion.