New poll: 68% of Americans support aggressive international climate treaty

authordefault
onSep 26, 2007 @ 14:30 PDT

A poll released today by the Yale Project on Climate Change and its partners finds that 68 percent of Americans support a new international treaty requiring the United States to cut its emissions of carbon dioxide 90 percent by the yearย 2050.

โ€œOne of the most surprising findings was the growing sense of urgency,โ€ said Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change and the studyโ€™s principal investigator. โ€œNearly half of Americans now believe that global warming is either already having dangerous impacts on people around the world or will in the next 10 years โ€“ a 20-percentage-point increase since 2004. These results indicate a sea change in publicย opinion.โ€

โ€œIn another surprising finding, 40 percent of respondents say a presidential candidateโ€™s position on global warming will be extremely important (16 percent) or very important (24 percent) in their decision about whom to vote for. โ€œWith the presidential primaries and general election near,โ€ he said, โ€œcandidates should recognize that global warming has become an important issue for theย electorate.โ€

If you like this story, please feel free to vote for it at Digg.com here and Hugg.com here and help us spread the word. Thanks!

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

onNov 28, 2025 @ 03:02 PST

The Labour peer called for new coal power in the Global Warming Policy Foundationโ€™s annual lecture.

The Labour peer called for new coal power in the Global Warming Policy Foundationโ€™s annual lecture.
Opinion
onNov 27, 2025 @ 06:38 PST

Blunt communication is our firewall.

Blunt communication is our firewall.
onNov 25, 2025 @ 22:00 PST

The programme is โ€œyet another bung to industrial productionโ€, experts say.

The programme is โ€œyet another bung to industrial productionโ€, experts say.
Analysis
onNov 24, 2025 @ 09:00 PST

Critics say new LNG ventures in British Columbia saddle Indigenous communities with debt, opaque ownership structures, and financial risk that could leave them owing billions.

Critics say new LNG ventures in British Columbia saddle Indigenous communities with debt, opaque ownership structures, and financial risk that could leave them owing billions.