Chattanooga Times Free Press

Poll: Americans favor slightly higher bills to fight warming

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — Most Americans are willing to pay a little more each month to fight global warming — but only a tiny bit, according to a new poll. Still, environmen­tal policy experts hail that as a hopeful sign.

Seventy-one percent want the federal government to do something about global warming, including 6 percent who think the government should act even though they are not sure climate change is happening, according to a poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago.

And those polled said they’d be willing to foot a little of that cost in higher electric bills.

If the cost of fighting climate change is only an additional $1 a month, 57 percent of Americans said they would support that. But as that fee goes up, support plummets. At $10 a month, 39 percent were in favor and 61 percent opposed. At $20 a month, the public is more than 2-to1 against it. And only 1-in-5 would support $50 a month.

“I feel we need to make small sacrifices — and money is a small sacrifice — to make life better for future generation­s,” said Sarah Griffin, a 63-yearold retired teacher in central Pennsylvan­ia. “Surely I have enough money to spend on something that’s worthwhile.”

Greg Davis, a 27-yearold post-graduate student in Columbus, Ohio, agreed: “It’s far more important to protect the environmen­t than to save money. I think that’s true for businesses as well as individual­s.”

That a majority is willing to pay more is a new phenomenon, said Tom Dietz, professor of sociology and environmen­tal science and policy at Michigan State University.

“While the amounts may seem small, the willingnes­s to take action, even if there are some out-of-pocket costs, is encouragin­g,” Dietz said in an email.

Dana Fisher, director of the Program for Society and the Environmen­t at the University of Maryland, said it’s noteworthy a majority was “willing to pay at all,” and added the levels of support for $10 a month and $20 a month are significan­t.

But so was the opposition to higher costs.

James Osadzinski, 52, of Rockford, Ill., said simply: “I have a set budget. I don’t have the money,” while for 26-year-old nurse Marina Shertzer of Pensacola, Fla., it doesn’t make sense because she doesn’t see climate change as a threat, but something cyclical and normal.

Of those polled, 77 percent said climate change is happening, 13 percent weren’t sure, and only 10 percent said it wasn’t happening.

There remains a partisan divide in how Americans view climate change. While 84 percent of Democrats and 55 percent of independen­ts view global warming as a fact and a problem the government needs to address, only 43 percent for Republican­s agree. And 18 percent of Republican­s said they think climate change is happening but don’t think the government should address the issue.

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