Research/Study
National TV news coverage of COP28 was sparse and inconsistent
While improved from last year, national TV news coverage of the UN climate summit still fell short of the comprehensive reporting needed to help address climate change
Published
A new Media Matters study has found that corporate broadcast and major cable news networks dedicated relatively little coverage to the recent COP28 summit, the world’s highest decision-making process on climate issues — though the data does show an improvement on networks’ inadequate coverage of last year’s COP summit.
From November 30 through December 13, representatives from nearly 200 countries met in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, for COP28, the United Nations’ annual climate summit, to negotiate goals and agree on steps aimed at mitigating human-induced climate change. This year’s conference sought to address numerous important issues, including a “climate damage fund to help countries that have already suffered irreparable damage from climate change impacts” and plans for polluting countries around the world to rapidly phase out of using fossil fuels. There was also controversy surrounding the outsized role that oil and gas companies played at the summit.
Given the significance of COP28 in shaping global climate policies, comprehensive national TV news coverage on the yearly summit is crucial for fostering public awareness and guiding policy discourse. Although there was a noticeable improvement in the coverage from last year (including greater focus on the fossil fuel industry’s role in driving the climate crisis and scrutiny of its place in the development of climate policy), overall coverage was sparse and inconsistent, which highlights an ongoing issue: TV news outlets often fail to prioritize climate coverage.
A previous Media Matters analysis looked at the first four days of coverage. This analysis, from November 30 through December 13, looked at coverage of the whole event and found:
- Corporate broadcast outlets and major cable news networks aired 5 hours and 42 minutes of combined coverage across 102 segments about COP28. This represents a bump compared to coverage of COP27, which was covered for a combined 3 hours and 48 minutes.
- Major cable news networks — CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News — aired just under 8 minutes of coverage on November 30, the first day of the summit. This represents an approximately 97% drop from opening day coverage of COP26 in 2021, when CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News aired just over 4 hours of combined coverage.
- CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News aired 5 hours and 25 minutes of coverage across 91 segments about the summit. CNN led with 2 hours and 43 minutes of coverage, followed by Fox News with 1 hour and 38 minutes, and MSNBC with 1 hour and 5 minutes. Fox News’ coverage, however, was rife with mockery, explicit climate change denial, and calls to delay climate action.
- Corporate broadcast networks — ABC, CBS, and NBC — aired only 16 minutes of coverage across 11 segments about COP28 during the study period. CBS led with 10 minutes of coverage, followed by ABC with 4 minutes, and NBC with 2 minutes.