Environment / Covering Climate Now / September 4, 2025

News Avoidance and the Climate Majority

The next phase of Covering Climate Now’s 89 Percent Project puts faces to the numbers.

Mark Hertsgaard

A newspaper box with a paper that reads “Michael Bears Down” in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael in Millville, Florida, on October 11, 2018.

(Emily Kask / AFP via Getty Images)

Jon Batiste sympathizes with the growing number of people avoiding the news these days, but the global music star has an antidote: Talk about climate solutions and “bring people together. People power is the way that you can change things in the world.”

Forty percent of the world’s people practice “news avoidance,” according to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism’s “Digital News Report 2025.” Traditional news coverage’s focus on conflict and suffering, along with its portrayal of politicians as the sole arbiters of events, leaves people feeling depressed and powerless, survey respondents said, causing many to tune out.

During the newsmaker interview Covering Climate Now organized last week for the next phase of The 89 Percent Project, Batiste was asked if his new song about climate change, “Petrichor,” can make a social impact, given that many people now shun news about topics as weighty as climate change. “I don’t want to hear about the problem if you don’t have an answer,” Batiste said, adding that his song “is not just saying [climate change] is a problem. It’s also saying we can solve it.”

The same spirit animates The 89 Percent Project. Launched in April, the project’s initial reporting highlighted the fact that 80 to 89 percent of the world’s people want their governments to take stronger climate action. However, most of those people don’t realize that they are the overwhelming majority—and therefore they don’t act, vote, or speak out, like it.

The next phase of The 89 Percent Project explores the people behind the numbers: Who are they? Where do they live, what do they do with their lives, are they surprised they’re the majority, and what kinds of climate policies do they wish to see implemented?

Some Covering Climate Now partners have already begun this reporting. The Guardian posted a story soliciting readers’ written responses to such questions (anonymously if so desired). In Brazil, Agência Pública conducted person-on-the-street interviews], gauging support for climate action. And Japan’s The Asahi Shimbun took a hybrid approach, studying the findings of public opinion polls and then checking them against the paper’s own interviews.

The goal of this phase of The 89 Percent Project is to present a vivid, factually grounded portrait of the global climate majority in all its diversity and potential. With news avoidance at an all-time high, this kind of reporting—featuring the names, faces, and sentiments of the overwhelming majority of the public—makes good commercial as well as journalistic sense.

Your support makes stories like this possible

From illegal war on Iran to an inhumane fuel blockade of Cuba, from AI weapons to crypto corruption, this is a time of staggering chaos, cruelty, and violence. 

Unlike other publications that parrot the views of authoritarians, billionaires, and corporations, The Nation publishes stories that hold the powerful to account and center the communities too often denied a voice in the national media—stories like the one you’ve just read.

Each day, our journalism cuts through lies and distortions, contextualizes the developments reshaping politics around the globe, and advances progressive ideas that oxygenate our movements and instigate change in the halls of power. 

This independent journalism is only possible with the support of our readers. If you want to see more urgent coverage like this, please donate to The Nation today.

Mark Hertsgaard

Mark Hertsgaard is the environment correspondent of The Nation and the executive director of the global media collaboration Covering Climate Now. His new book is Big Red’s Mercy:  The Shooting of Deborah Cotton and A Story of Race in America.

More from The Nation

Santa Marta May Be a Game-Changing Moment for the Climate

Santa Marta May Be a Game-Changing Moment for the Climate Santa Marta May Be a Game-Changing Moment for the Climate

At a crucial climate conference, a critical mass of countries begins mapping a fossil fuel phaseout.

Mark Hertsgaard and Covering Climate Now

A press conference from the First International Conference on the Transitioning Away From Fossil Fuels.

Wait, Could This Be a Climate Conference That Actually Works? Wait, Could This Be a Climate Conference That Actually Works?

As the Iran war highlights fossil fuel risks, a coalition of the willing pursues a global phaseout.

Mark Hertsgaard

A gas mask is held aloft at the inaugural Earth Day protest in New York City, New York, on April 22, 1970.

Earth Day Was Born in Protest Earth Day Was Born in Protest

Now protest may have put Greenpeace USA on the brink of extinction.

Mark Hertsgaard

A home is engulfed in flames during the Eaton fire in Pasadena, California, on January 7, 2025.

A Burning House, a Quiet Media, a Silenced Majority A Burning House, a Quiet Media, a Silenced Majority

A white paper from Covering Climate Now on the state of climate journalism.

Covering Climate Now

An Indigenous man performs, lying on the ground while holding a globe in his hand during the Indigenous People Global March at the COP30 UN Climate Change Conference in Belém, Brazil, on November 17, 2025.

A New Economic Superpower Could Spark a Retreat From Fossil Fuels A New Economic Superpower Could Spark a Retreat From Fossil Fuels

A little-noticed ray of hope may be peeking over the horizon. A climate conference in Colombia later this month could begin to draw up the roadmap blocked at COP30.

Mark Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope

Are Plastics Poisoning Us?

Are Plastics Poisoning Us? Are Plastics Poisoning Us?

A Netflix documentary exposes plastic’s health harms but misses its climate connection.

Mark Hertsgaard