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An animation of a frog in a pot of boiling water. The frog types on a laptop resting on a floating pillow.

Ever heard the story about the frog in a pot of boiling water?

A frog jumps into a pot of water on a stove. The frog isn't alarmed at all that the pot is about to boil because the temperature of the water is changing too slowly for the frog to notice it's in danger.

How does the story relate to climate change?

With everything happening in the news these days, people just don't seem to be urgently worried about climate change.

In Don't Even Think About It: Why Our Brains Are Wired To Ignore Climate Change (Bloomsbury, 2015), author and climate activist George Marshall explains:

  • People aren't so different from the frog in the pot when it comes to climate change.

  • People don't see climate change as a real threat, and it's holding us back from having effective climate change conversations.

How do we respond to threats?

A drawing of a brain responding to stress

According to Marshall, our brains are wired to worry about threats that are:

☑️ Here and now

☑️ Affect us directly

☑️ Certain

☑️ Come from an identifiable enemy

A person running at you with a knife checks all of these boxes, and your brain sends you into a fight, flight, or freeze response.

Why don't people see climate change as a threat?

A woman holds up a sign that says 'No'. She drops it to expose another 'No' sign. She repeats this over and over.

Climate change doesn’t check the threat boxes!

✖️ It's not “here”.

  • Climate change isn't felt equally across the world.

  • People don't really "see" it in developed countries.

✖️ It's not “now”.

  • People see it as a future problem.

  • Most climate scientists talk about what will happen in 2030, or in 50 years to 100 years.

✖️ It's not always described as "certain".

  • Until recently, scientists shied away from describing the effects of climate change as a certainty because models weren’t good enough.

  • Scientists often avoid strong language about climate change because they're trying to remain "neutral".

✖️ There's no clear "enemy".

  • How can you blame melting permafrost for releasing methane?

  • There is no one specific actor to blame.

Why is it so hard to communicate the threat of climate change?

Billy Nye The Science Guy pointing to a globe on fire. He says, 'This is an actual crisis.'

Recent events like droughts and wildfires around the world have shown us that climate change is HERE and NOW. It's already having worse effects on the countries that least cause it.

But without an identifiable enemy, the topic presents a challenging disconnect. Since all humans, especially those of us in high-emissions countries like Canada, contribute to the problem, the enemy is ourselves.

The only language we have to talk about the problem, the scale, or the solutions is seen as "technocratic elite" language. We don’t have a public language for it yet. 

Did you know?

Activists see the fossil fuel industry as a huge obstacle to climate action. Much like the tobacco industry did with smoking back in the 1990s, fossil fuel companies pour a lot of money into misinformation campaigns to minimize the perceived threat of climate change (Richard Corley, "What if the restrictions on tobacco ads applied to climate-polluting products?", Corporate Knights, 2020).

Take Action

A frog responding to a snake trying to attack it. The frog's body moves into a confrontational stance.How do we get people to recognize the threat of climate change?

We need to change the conversation by connecting with people on a more personal and emotional level.

Before you start talking to people, ask yourself:

Generation Climate logo

These Bytes were created with the assistance of Generation Climate.

This project was undertaken with the financial support of the Government of Canada

License:

This Byte has been authored by

SB

Sabrina Bowman

Manager, Operations and Special Projects

English

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