Sunday, April 28, 2013

Widespread Drought

Widespread drought, super-storm Sandy, and a melting ice cap failed to revive the media's interest in climate change in 2012, with worldwide coverage continuing its three-year slide, according to a media database maintained by the nonprofit journalism site The Daily Climate.
The decline in the number of stories published on the topic – 2 percent fewer than 2011 – was the smallest since the United Nations climate talks collapsed in Copenhagen in 2009.
Climate change is one of the few subjects so important that we need to be oblivious to cycles and just cover it as hard as we can all the time.
- Glenn Kramon,
New York Times
Coverage of climate impacts – extreme weather, melting glaciers and Arctic ice, warming temperatures and more – dominated climate news, accounting for almost one of every three stories written on the topic in 2012. That is the highest proportion in the five years that the website has been tracking coverage.
http://wwwp.dailyclimate.org/tdc-newsroom/2013/01/2012-climate-change-reporting

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