From the University of Colorado at Boulder
Reporters using more ‘hedging’ words in climate change articles, CU-Boulder study finds
The amount of “hedging” language—words that suggest room for doubt—used by prominent newspapers in articles about climate change has increased over time, according to a new study by the University of Colorado Boulder.
The study, published in the journal Environmental Communication, also found that newspapers in the U.S. use more hedging language in climate stories than their counterparts in Spain.
“We were surprised to find newspapers increased their use of hedging language, since the scientific consensus that climate change is happening and that humans are contributing to it has substantially strengthened over time,” said Adriana Bailey, a doctoral student at CU-Boulder’s Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, or CIRES, and lead author of the paper.
CIRES is a joint institute of CU-Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The researchers examined articles published in two U.S. papers, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, and in two Spanish papers, El Mundo and El Pais. The articles used for the study were published in 2001 and 2007, years when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC, released its latest assessments of the physical science basis for climate change.
The researchers combed the articles for words from all parts of speech that typically suggest uncertainty, such as almost, speculative, could, believe, consider, blurry, possible and projecting.
Once the words were identified, the scientists considered the context they were used in to determine if they should count as hedging language.
For example, the word “uncertainty” was counted in a New York Times article that read “…substantial uncertainty still clouds projections of important impacts…” but it was not counted in a sentence in the same newspaper that read “…uncertainty was removed as to whether humans had anything to do with climate change…”
Also, the researchers only counted hedging language that had to do with either the physical science basis for climate change—such as changes in average temperatures and precipitation patterns—or the IPCC process. Language related to possible adaptation and mitigation efforts, such as preparing coastal cities for expected sea level rise, was not included.
The results showed that in 2001, the U.S. papers used 189 hedging words or expressions per 10,000 words printed while the Spanish papers used 107. In 2007, the number of hedging words and expressions used per 10,000 words rose to 267 in the U.S. and to 136 in Spain.
Given that Spain has ratified the Kyoto Protocol—the international agreement to limit greenhouse gas emissions—while the U.S. has not and that Spain has proposed a national climate policy, the research team was not surprised to find that Spanish newspapers seem to be communicating less uncertainty about climate change than U.S. papers.
But the team did not expect to see increases in hedging language in both countries over time. The study was not designed to determine the reasons for the increase, but Bailey said it could be related to a number of factors, from amplified politicization of climate change—including polarization of climate stances by political leaders—to the possibility that reporters are actually writing more about the detailed science, which requires greater explanation of the accompanying scientific uncertainties.
The researchers also noticed that the ways in which qualifications are introduced into climate change articles have evolved over time.
“One of the new ways uncertainty is being constructed is by comparing IPCC reports and climate studies against each other, and in that way, presenting results that seem disparate,” Bailey said. “The second new way is by comparing predictions to observations—by describing climate changes that are happening faster than expected or that are smaller than anticipated, for example.
“Making sense of these ‘surprises’ is part of the scientific process; it’s how we build new knowledge,” she added “But news stories don’t often provide readers with the background information necessary to understand this.”
While this study analyzed news articles that appeared after the IPCC’s third and fourth assessment reports, the researchers say the findings can help people better interpret media coverage of more recently released reports on climate change, including the IPCC’s fifth assessment, which was published last year.
An awareness of how the media use hedging language to cover the changing climate can help media consumers distinguish remaining scientific questions from uncertainties constructed by the news, the researchers said.
Other CU-Boulder co-authors of the study are Maxwell Boykoff, an assistant professor at CIRES, and Lorine Giangola, STEM coordinator for the Graduate Teacher Program.
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@Chad Wozniack
It’s Boulder, they have to look busy in between pot smoke breaks.
The tactic in the 90’s was to predicts these disasters in a future time frame that has arrived with no disasters.
People realize they didn’t happen, so this administration has morphed the tactic(after changing the terms a couple of times) to convince people that these disasters really are here and happening right now(even extreme cold and snow).
If this doesn’t work, maybe the next position will be that the disasters have been happening for decades and keeps getting worse.
That could work…………..disasters started with the Industrial Revolution and that’s what caused climate and weather disasters like the Dust Bowl in the 1930’s. The Great Tri State tornado of 1925 and all those hurricanes which were worse then any in our time. World War I and World War II would not have happened if not for humans burning fossil fuels.
I still think we should blame it on all those plants and creatures that died and left fossil fuels in the ground. They were irresponsible in dumping all that carbon pollution in a place where reckless humans could get access to it and use it for selfish things like growing food, heating their houses and transportation.
Maybe we’ll find out that some oil is abiotic. In that case, there could be an opportunity to change the name from burning fossil fuels and carbon pollution to something more sinister sounding like tectonic toxins.
A study on hedging in climate reporting begins with a premise that is hedging:
“The amount of “hedging” language—words that suggest room for doubt—”
“the scientific consensus that climate change is happening and that humans are contributing to it”
How many from the pro-AGW and the anti-AGW side believe that that the climate is undergoing NO changes and that humans are contributing absolutely NOTHING to it?