Greta Thunberg, a 16-year-old who leads a global climate movement, asked in a recent tweet, “Can we all now please stop saying ‘climate change’ and instead call it what it is: climate breakdown, climate crisis, climate emergency, ecological breakdown, ecological crisis and ecological emergency?”
She’s not alone in her sentiment. Many of those engaged in environmental advocacy feel the term “climate change” fails to convey the specificity or urgency needed to address the gravity of the climate challenge. A new recent study shows they may be right.
New York City-based SPARK Neuro, a neuroanalytics company that measures emotion and attention, studied how participants responded to six terms — “climate crisis,” “environmental destruction,” “environmental collapse,” “weather destabilization,” “global warming” and “climate change.” A total of 120 people — 40 Republicans, 40 Democrats and 40 independents — participated in the study, which measured the “emotional intensity” of responses to audio recordings of various controversial phrases, with each term inserted, like this example below:“Sea levels will rise dramatically, to the point that many coastal cities will be submerged, as a result of [INSERT TERM].” The electrical activity of the participants’ brains and skin was rated on a scale of zero to five — five being the strongest. Those results were then compared to a traditional survey for reference.Two terms stood out from the pack: climate crisis and environmental destruction. Among Democrats, the study found a 60% greater emotional response to the term “climate crisis” than to “climate change,” and a tripling in emotional response among Republicans.Spencer Gerrol, CEO of SPARK Neuro, said evoking emotion is vital to getting people to act. Because terms like climate change and global warming do not imply good or bad, they don’t spark passion, he said.
“People tend to underestimate how much emotions factor in,” he said. “Ultimately it is emotions that change hearts and minds and lead to actions.” Among the Republicans in the study, the term “environmental destruction” evoked what was considered an extreme reaction, registering an emotional response almost four times greater than that of their responses to the term “climate change.”However, Gerrol said that kind of visceral intensity can backfire. “The term ‘environmental destruction’ seems to have crossed a line with Republicans. It is likely seen as alarmist, perhaps even implying blame, which can lead to counterarguing and pushback,” he said.The term “climate crisis” appeared to fall in a sweet spot. It performed well in terms of responses across the political spectrum and elicited the greatest emotional response among independents. “Independents are thinking less about what camp they fall into because they are not driven by partisan beliefs and visceral reactions. It implies they are thinking more critically about the term,” Gerrol said. One online petition from The Action Network, a progressive advocacy organization, shows some are pushing for this change. It calls on major TV networks to “call the climate crisis transforming the Earth exactly what it is: a climate crisis.”