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To: The Rt Hon Edward Davey MP, Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change

Improve Public Understanding of Climate Science and the Implications of Climate Change

Dear Mr Davey,

We request that the Department for Energy and Climate Change initiates a Public Information Campaign to improve public understanding of Climate Science, to illustrate the implications of Climate Change, and to effectively communicate the findings and recommendations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Why is this important?

There is a clear need for the Department of Energy and Climate Change to embark on a Public Information Campaign that actively seeks to:

Improve public understanding of Climate Science

Illustrate the implications of Climate Change

Effectively communicate the findings and recommendations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

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The realities of climate change are clear and present. Experts in the field of climate science have published their findings time and time again, and there are very few dissenting voices against the consensus view.

“Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, human influence on the climate system is clear, and limiting climate change will require substantial and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions. These are the key conclusions from an assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)” - http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/press/press_release_wg1_full_report.pdf

These opening words from the IPCC press release announcing the online publication of its full report ‘Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis’, are utterly unambiguous. An international endeavour comprising the work of hundreds of climate scientists, prepared with the assistance of more than a thousand expert reviewers, and citing over 9000 publications, the report leaves no doubt as to the reality of climate change.

The scientific consensus is not fully reflected in the wider population, however. A recent report from the UK Energy Research Centre suggests that public scepticism towards climate change has actually risen in recent years and that people are now less concerned about its potential impact than previously (http://www.ukerc.ac.uk/support/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=3514 - pdf download - survey conducted March 2013).

The flooding crisis of the last few weeks has re-ignited a national debate on climate change, centred around the question of whether the spate of storms that contributed heavily to rising floodwaters could be attributed to climate change. But it has been clear that there is a large degree of misunderstanding on the topic, as well as a certain amount of misrepresentation. Some of the views on display in the national media are not just a rejection that the extensive flooding may have been caused by climate change, but are rejections of the very idea of climate change as a whole. Such sentiments are rare, but come from highly prominent political individuals. Of most concern is that they are people who are not experts in the field, but have still been given equal weight to their arguments.

The issue of climate change is not one of political opinion, but of scientific fact. The Department of Energy and Climate Change should begin a program of public information releases that relay the message that climate scientists and many non-governmental organisations have been imparting for a number of years. We have seen instances of public information campaigns regarding health, safety, and security concerns in a wide range of areas. It is high-time that climate change was given the attention it requires.

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Updates

2015-06-06 21:57:55 +0100

100 signatures reached

2014-02-26 02:10:39 +0000

50 signatures reached

2014-02-17 17:59:44 +0000

25 signatures reached

2014-02-17 10:59:36 +0000

10 signatures reached