Denali glaciers melting, National Park Service |
Climate
change speakers love to tell people that evidence for climate change exists,
but they hardly ever tell people what the evidence is. Asking people to accept
a controversial point on faith only gets you so far.
So—let’s
make a stab at how to persuade climate change skeptics. I talked about climate
change and persuasion theory last time. This post puts that theory into
practical action. Let’s review the points to consider:
First, long-lasting attitude change occurs only
when the audience thinks about the topic.
Second,
speakers must give supporting information.
Do you expect people to take your word for stuff? There’s not a chance that
will work. Don’t be silly.
Third,
speakers need to make it easy for
audiences to think carefully. You can’t make the opposite mistake and spew out
incomprehensible facts, complicated figures, and obscure technical terms. Help
the audience understand what you’re saying.
Got it?
Sounds simple enough, doesn’t it? But persuasive speaking requires lots of effort. You can’t
just say that “almost all climate scientists believe in climate change” unless
you also say something specific about
the evidence behind their belief. You can’t even say the scientists agree about
climate change unless you give evidence
to show that they agree. For example, thousands of scientific studies show that
fossil fuels are causing climate change. But you can’t just say, “there are
thousands of studies.” Too vague! Not convincing. A skeptic will tune you out. You
need to state and prove the facts.
Try
this, which you might say early in a climate change speech (my imaginary speech
is in boldface type):
A research team led by John Cook of the University of Queensland looked at
more than 4000 published scientific studies about the causes of climate change.
They agreed that “The consensus that humans are causing recent global warming
is shared by 90%–100% of publishing climate scientists according to six
independent studies by co-authors of this paper.” They also found that most disagreement about
climate change comes from people who are not climate science experts. That’s
right, the controversy isn’t coming from the people who know the most about
climate.
The United Nations international study panel, which studied the work of scientists all
over the world, showed that greenhouse gases have increased greatly during our
industrial age. They found that “The atmospheric concentrations of the
greenhouse gases carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and
nitrous oxide (N2O) have all increased due to human activity.” They
add that “In 2011 the concentrations of these greenhouse gases were 391 ppm,
1803 ppm, and 324 ppm and exceeded pre-industrial levels by about 40%, 150%,
and 20%, respectively.”
That states
points in the speaker’s words but gives the audience some specifics in the source’s
exact words. It cites sources. Next, we need to put the specifics in
understandable terms. Our imaginary speech continues:
In other words, today, there is about 2/5 more carbon
dioxide in the air than a couple hundred years ago. The AAAS
Climate Science Panel points out that there is “overwhelming evidence of
human-caused climate change” that shows “significant costs and extraordinary future
risks to society.”
Climate
change deniers love to say that carbon dioxide levels vary due to natural
causes. That’s true to some extent, but it’s not happening to this degree. So,
you need to pre-empt that argument:
Scientists have taken ice core samples going back 800,000 years. Carbon dioxide
levels are the highest now that they have been in all that time—more than ¾ of
a million years. Satellite observations have also shown that solar radiation is
actually a bit less in recent decades. Taken together, those facts pretty much prove
that the levels we have now are not natural.
Turning
the tables on climate change deniers is another good idea. Many conservatives
think that university professors and the United Nations are a bunch of left-wing
conspiracy artists. But how can they argue with the energy companies themselves?
It turns out that big energy companies know all about climate change; they just
lie about it. Let’s continue our imaginary speech:
Finally, although the oil, gas, and coal
industries have shoved climate change denial down the public’s throats, it
recently turned out that Exxon
knew in 1982 or even earlier that oil burning caused climate change. This
was proven by their own documents. Exxon even conducted climate change studies
on one of its tankers, the Esso Atlantic. In fact, in 1977, James
Black, an Exxon scientist, told his own company this: “In the first place,
there is general scientific agreement that the most likely manner in which
mankind is influencing the global climate is through carbon dioxide release
from the burning of fossil fuels.”
End with a
brief summary to help the audience remember the key points they need to think
about:
So, let’s put it like this: climate change
is real. Scientists have proven that the main cause is the burning of oil,
coal, and gas. The amount caused by burning these fuels is far greater than
anything that nature has been doing for the last several hundred thousand years.
Although they’ve lied about it, Exxon has known this for years and their own
documents prove it.
Of
course, that’s not as flashy as Greta Thunberg. So, let’s end our imaginary
speech by coming back to Thunberg to give her the credit she deserves:
Greta Thunberg is right. It’s time to
believe the scientists. She said, “How dare you!” She was right. Her critics
are wrong. Let’s get this done while there is still time.
So, use
principles of persuasion. Give facts. Restate the facts in terms that ordinary
people can understand. Cite your sources. Relate facts to common experiences
that people share. To pre-empt the climate change deniers, refute the wrong
arguments that you know they have in their minds. Since Exxon and other big
energy companies know that climate change is real, go ahead and quote them.
Climate change deniers aren’t foolish enough to think that Exxon is part of a
left-wing Deep State conspiracy. And, for crying out loud, be careful with scientific
jargon and esoteric abbreviations. Avoid needless technical terms and define
any terms that you do need to use.
Long-term
attitude change requires the audience to think carefully about the topic. There’s
no way to force an audience to think, and there’s no guarantee that any persuasion
will work. Still, good speakers give the audience a chance to hear the other
side and to come around to a new viewpoint. A good climate speech would also
include attention-getters, transitions, and other speaking techniques.
I’ve tried to show
how to present controversial technical content in a way that gives the audience
food for thought.
Hints
for presenting statistics in a speech:
1. Round numbers off. Don’t say, “In Texas,
there was an average of 5.8 homicides per
100,000 population.” Try this: “Almost 6 Texas residents out of 100,000
were homicide victims in one year.“ That’s a littler easier to understand.
2. Compare the numbers to something
familiar: “Almost 6 Texas residents out of 100,000 were homicide victims in
one year, while almost 170 out of
100,000 died of heart disease.” That gives people context.
3. Or show a pie graph or bar graph.
If the audience needs exact numbers, put
them on a PowerPoint slide or handout or post them on your website. When people
are listening, be accurate but don’t overwhelm people with intimidating details. I’ll think
about pie graphs and might post something about visual aids at some future time.
4. Organize the statistics. Let’s look back
at the UN quotations above. Here’s the pretty technical explanation that they wrote.
“The atmospheric concentrations of the
greenhouse gases carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and
nitrous oxide (N2O) have all increased due to human activity.”
“In 2011 the concentrations of these
greenhouse gases were 391 ppm, 1803 ppm, and 324 ppm and exceeded
pre-industrial levels by about 40%, 150%, and 20%, respectively.”
That’s
good, but you need to read it twice to understand it. In a speech, the audience
doesn’t get a chance to listen twice. If the UN group needed to give this information
in a speech, instead of a technical report, they could say this:
“The concentration of greenhouse gases in
the atmosphere have all increased due to human activity. For example, in 2011,
carbon dioxide was measured at almost 400 parts per million. That’s about 40%
higher than it was before the industrial age. Similarly, methane is up about
150%, and nitrous oxide is up about 20%.”
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