Research/Study
National TV news covered Trump’s buried climate assessment with gusto. Biden’s assessment barely made the air.
Coverage of the Fifth National Climate Assessment missed a key opportunity to highlight the report’s emphasis on climate justice and fossil fuel industry accountability
Published
On November 14, the U.S. Global Change Research Program released the Fifth National Climate Assessment, which found that the United States is already experiencing severe impacts of rapid climate change, with a worsening outlook over the next decades, largely due to continued fossil fuel use.
This report, which is mandated by Congress, underscores the inadequacy of the current efforts to reduce emissions in order to meet urgent national and global emissions targets, highlights the role of fossil fuels in exacerbating climate change, and urges robust action to mitigate the worst impacts of global warming. Additionally, the assessment places a strong emphasis on climate justice, recognizing the disproportionate effects of climate change on marginalized communities, including those shaped by racist practices like redlining and indigenous communities.
After a summer of record-breaking extreme weather events — from searing heat waves to torrential rains to raging wildfires and smoke plumes — the latest assessment presented national TV news with another opportunity to not only report on these events but also delve into two crucial but undercovered areas: fossil fuel industry accountability and climate justice.
Unfortunately, this opportunity was largely squandered. A Media Matters review found that national TV news outlets CNN, MSNBC, NBC, CBS, ABC, and Fox News barely covered the report. The lackluster coverage starkly contrasts with the huge media focus the previous climate assessment drew in 2018, after former President Donald Trump tried to bury the report.
Recognizing the sheer number of important stories dominating the current news cycle, the scant coverage of the climate report still emerges as a crucial oversight and it highlights the challenge of ensuring thorough and informed public dialogue on climate issues amidst a landscape of competing news priorities.
A Media Matters analysis from November 14, the day the report was released, through November 15 found:
- National TV news networks aired just 30 minutes of combined coverage about the Fifth National Climate Assessment.
- Major cable news networks — CNN and MSNBC — aired just 24 minutes of coverage about the report, with CNN airing the majority of coverage. Fox News did not cover the report at all.
- Corporate broadcast networks — ABC and CBS — aired only 5 minutes about the report. NBC did not cover the report at all.