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Religious Americans less worried about climate change – poll

New York, US
AP

Most adults in the United States – including a large majority of Christians and people who identify with other religions – consider the Earth sacred and believe God gave humans a duty to care for it.

But highly religious Americans – those who pray daily, regularly attend religious services and consider religion crucial in their lives – are far less likely than other US adults to express concern about global warming.

US Wisconsin cross and clouds

Storm clouds approach a church in Mequon, Wisconsin, on Sunday, 2nd AUgust, 2020. A new Pew Research Center report published on Thursday, 17th November explores how religion in the US intersects with views on the environment and climate change. PICTURE: AP Photo/Morry Gash.

Those are among the key findings in a comprehensive report released Thursday by the Pew Research Center, which surveyed 10,156 US adults from 11th to 17th April. It’s margin of error for the full sample of respondents is plus or minus 1.6 percentage points.

The survey says religious Americans tend to be less concerned about climate change for several reasons.

“First and foremost is politics: The main driver of US public opinion about the climate is political party, not religion,” the report says.

“Highly religious Americans are more inclined than others to identify with or lean toward the Republican Party, and Republicans tend to be much less likely than Democrats to believe human activity [such as burning fossil fuels] is warming the Earth or to consider climate change a serious problem.”

Responding to the findings, Rev Richenda Fairhurst, steward of climate at the non-profit Circle Faith Future, said the siloed culture in America sows further division instead of inspiring teamwork.

“I don’t know who that serves,” she said. “But it’s not serving the community – and it’s certainly not serving the planet.”



The poll found that about three-quarters (74 per cent) of religiously affiliated Americans say the Earth is sacred. A larger share, (80 per cent), feel a sense of stewardship – and fully or mostly agree with the idea that “God gave humans a duty to protect and care for the Earth, including the plants and animals.”

Religious Americans who show little or no concern about climate change also say “there are much bigger problems in the world, that God is in control of the climate, and that they do not believe the climate is actually changing.”

Many religious Americans are also concerned about the potential consequences of environmental regulations, including the loss of individual freedoms, fewer jobs or increased energy prices, the report says.

The survey also found that two-thirds of US adults who are religiously affiliated say their faith’s scriptures include lessons about the environment, and about four-in-10 say they’ve prayed for the environment in the past year.

The views, the report says, are common across a range of religious traditions.

Three-quarters of both evangelical Protestants and members of historically Black Protestant churches say the Bible includes lessons about the environment. Eight in 10 US Catholics and mainline Protestants say the Earth is sacred and so do 77 per cent of non-Christian religions, according to the poll.

But Christians, and more broadly, religiously affiliated Americans, are divided in their views about climate change, the report says.

Those who consider climate change “an extremely or very serious problem” range from 68 per cent of adults who identify with the historically Black Protestant tradition, to 34 per cent of evangelical Protestants.

In none of the major Protestant traditions did a majority say the Earth is getting warmer mostly because of human activity; only 32 per cent of evangelicals felt that way.


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The report says the religiously unaffiliated – the fastest-growing group in surveys asking Americans about their religious identity – are much more likely to say that climate change is an extreme or very serious problem (70 per cent) than religiously affiliated Americans (52 per cent).

Commonly known as the “nones,” they describe themselves as atheists, agnostics or “nothing in particular.” The report says they are far more likely to say the Earth is getting warmer mostly because of human-induced activity (66 per cent) than those who are religiously affiliated (47 per cent).

The survey offers clues as to why religious Americans are less likely to care about climate change than those with no religion despite seeing a link between their beliefs and caring for the environment:

• For US congregations, climate change doesn’t seem to be a major focus. The report says that among all US adults who attend religious services at least once or twice per month, only eight per cent say they “hear a great deal or quite a bit about climate change in sermons.”

• One in five say they hear some discussion of the topic from the pulpit.

• And just six per cent of American congregants say they talk about climate change with other people at their congregation a great deal or quite a bit.

Highly religious Americans are also less likely to view inefficient energy practices as morally wrong, the report says. This same pattern is also seen when asked about eating food that takes a lot of energy to produce.

Rev Fletcher Harper, an Episcopal priest, and executive director of GreenFaith, a global multi-faith environmental organisation based in New York, said he was not surprised by the findings since he doesn’t see culturally and politically conservative Americans prioritising climate action.

“What this study doesn’t tell us, though, is the role that religion, when utilized effectively, can play in moving people who are concerned but inactive into public action on the climate’s behalf,” Harper said. “This warrants further research so that we can all understand better what positive role religion can play in the fight against climate change.”

 

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